English LCCC Newsbulletin For Lebanese, Lebanese Related, Global News & Editorials
For December 24/2020
Compiled & Prepared by: Elias Bejjani

#elias_bejjani_news
 

The Bulletin's Link on the lccc Site
http://data.eliasbejjaninews.com/eliasnews19/english.december24.20.htm

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Bible Quotations For today

There is no longer Jew or Greek, there is no longer slave or free, there is no longer male and female; for all of you are one in Christ Jesus.
Letter to the Galatians 03/23-29/:”Before faith came, we were imprisoned and guarded under the law until faith would be revealed. Therefore the law was our disciplinarian until Christ came, so that we might be justified by faith. But now that faith has come, we are no longer subject to a disciplinarian, for in Christ Jesus you are all children of God through faith. As many of you as were baptized into Christ have clothed yourselves with Christ. There is no longer Jew or Greek, there is no longer slave or free, there is no longer male and female; for all of you are one in Christ Jesus. And if you belong to Christ, then you are Abraham’s offspring, heirs according to the promise.”
 

Titles For The Latest English LCCC Lebanese & Lebanese Related News & Editorials published on December 23-24/2020

Video-Text/Is Dr. Geagea Going To Sign A “Paper Of Understanding” With Hezbollah?
Elias Bejjani/September 04/16
Ministry of Health: 2246 new coronavirus cases, 22 deaths
Lebanon to Task Alvarez and Marsal anew with Forensic Audit
President Aoun signs decree transferring credit to purchase Covid19 vaccines from Pfizer
Hariri Meets Aoun, Says No New Government before Holidays
Hariri hopes for government after New Year: We want ministers who would tell us ‘no’ when we are wrong
Presidency Information Office denies what was broadcast by “Al Jadeed”: “MP Bassil has no role in forming the government”
Center House Sources Slam 'Bats of the Palace'
Report: ‘Positive’ Atmospheres Emerge After Aoun-Hariri Meeting
Arslan Says 18-seat Cabinet ‘Marginalizes’ Druze Community
4 Suspects Arrested over Torching of Christmas Tree in North
Army Chief Meets Chief of Staff of the French Armies in Yarzé
Berri receives Central Bank Governor, extends holiday well wishes to the Lebanese
There is precious little joy to be found in Lebanon this Christmas/Najia Houssari/Arab News/December 24, 2020
Beirut port explosion: Nearly five months on, residents’ trauma has healed little/Najia Houssari/Arab News/December 24, 2020
What photographer Joe Bejjani’s death says about the dark days to come for Lebanon/Makram Rabah/Al Arabiya/December 23/2020


Titles For The Latest English LCCC Miscellaneous Reports And News published on December 22-23/2020

Silent night for Bethlehem as coronavirus keeps pilgrims away
No Merry Christmas Vacation for Enraged Trump
WHO: Almost 4.6 million new cases were reported to WHO last week
Global Virus Rules for Christmas: Tough, Mild or None at All
UK Discovers Another New Coronavirus Variant
EU Starts to Ease Bans over UK Virus Strain; WHO to Meet
Top US officials discuss options to protect Americans in Iraq from Iran attacks
Bahrain Urges End to Regional Disputes as Gulf Summit Looms
Israel Parliament Dissolves, Sparking Fourth Election in Two Years
U.S. imposes fresh sanctions on Syria in push for Assad to end war
Hey Iran: Israeli Sub Heads To Persian Gulf With Egypt OK

 

Titles For The Latest The Latest LCCC English analysis & editorials from miscellaneous sources published on December 22-23/2020
Will Biden learn from Trump and keep making America secure again/Clifford D. May/The Washington Times/December 23/2020
To fight anti-Semitism, the UN must first define it/David May and Haley Weinischke/ Washington Examiner/December 23/2020
Iran Is Not Looking for a War With America/But Biden should make it clear that the U.S. is willing to respond to anything the Iranians are planning./Eli Lake/Bloomberg/December 23/2020
Drug Trafficking: The Dirtiest Little Secret/Chris Farrell/Gatestone Institute/December 23/2020
It’s easy to criticize Abbas for Palestinian failures but the true blame lies with the extremists/Ray Hanania/Arab News/December 23/2020
Why the Qatar blockade should remain in place/Mohamed Alodadi/Al Arabiya/December 23/2020

 

The Latest English LCCC Lebanese & Lebanese Related News & Editorials published on December 22-23/2020

Video-Text/Elias Bejjani/(2016 Archive)Is Dr. Geagea Going To Sign A “Paper Of Understanding” With Hezbollah?
/هل يوقع د. جعجع ورقة تفاهم مع حزب الله
http://eliasbejjaninews.com/archives/45344/elias-bejjaniis-dr-geagea-going-to-sign-a-paper-of-understanding-with-hezbollah%d9%87%d9%84-%d9%8a%d9%88%d9%82%d8%b9-%d8%af-%d8%ac%d8%b9%d8%ac%d8%b9-%d9%88%d8%b1%d9%82%d8%a9-%d8%aa%d9%81/

#Geagea_Fatal_Sin

Is Dr. Geagea Going To Sign A “Paper Of Understanding” With Hezbollah?
Elias Bejjani/September 04/16
Really, I can’t understand what Dr. Samir Geagea, the leader of the Lebanese Forces Party (LF) is doing and for what?
There is No logic, No comprehensible rational, or any kind of heroism at all in the sudden shocking derailing from his deeply rooted resistance past to the adaption of pro Hezbollah stances within a very short time.
The man and against all odds took a 180 degree deviation track, and is strongly and openly supporting the Lebanese Iranian puppet and Trojan, MP. Micheal Aoun for the Presidency post that has been vacant for more than two years because of Hezbollah’s intimidation, Iran’s occupational -expansionism agenda, and anti-constitutional stances.
Yesterday Dr. Samir Geagea loudly and fiercely called on the Lebanese members of parliament to immediately elect MP. Micheal Aoun as a president, and bizarrely alleged that this election will be a salvation means for Lebanon.
For heavens sake how could the pro-Iranian Aoun save Lebanon when he himself is an Iranian hostage, puppet, and a mere anti-Lebanese robatic tool.
Aoun has been for the past 11 years against Lebanon’s independence, freedom, sovereignty, democracy, common living, existence, history, identity and not honouring all the Maronite historical national convictions?
Politically, Geagea is committing suicide and at the same solidifying the Iranian occupation and hegemony for nothing in return at all, neither for himself as a politician, not for our people, or for Lebanon’s independence and sovereignty.
MP. Micheal Aoun in 11 years after signing the humiliating “Paper of understanding” with Hezbollah has got nothing from this Iranian terrorist military and denominational proxy in spite of all the cowardice succumbing that he offered.
In the same context, Aoun’s past in reality and practicality is totally ashamed of his present as well as from his future.. and definitely Geagea’s harvest from his pro Iranian coup against himself , against his strong patriotic image, and against his past will not be any different no matter what.
The question is, where Lebanon is heading to after Geagea’s surrender?
Personally, I feel so sad and extremely disappointed, because Dr. Samir Geagea who is well known to be a man of faith, hope and principles is totally replicating the Syrian-Iranian deadly Micheal Aoun’s deviation that took place in year 2006 in the aftermath of the “Paper Of Understanding” that he signed with Hezbollah.
In conclusion, Sadly, all what Dr. Geagea needs to become another Aoun is signing a “Paper Of understanding” with Hezbollah, and quite Frankly I will not be surprised if this happens, although I pray that such a deadly sin shall not occur.


Ministry of Health: 2246 new coronavirus cases, 22 deaths
NNA/December 23/2020
The Ministry of Public Health announced 2246 new coronavirus infection cases, which raises the cumulative number to 163225 confirmed cases.
22 deaths have been recorded over the past 24 hours.

Lebanon to Task Alvarez and Marsal anew with Forensic Audit
Agence France Presse/December 23/2020
Lebanon announced plans to resume contacts with Alvarez and Marsal consultancy firm to conduct forensic audit into the state’s accounts, after a bill passed in Parliament approving the lifting of banking secrecy. “Based on the Parliament bill and government decision, it was decided to communicate with Alvarez and Marsal company to follow up on forensic audit of the Central Bank’s accounts, ministries, independent interests, funds and public institutions,” said caretaker Finance Minister Ghazi Wazni. His remarks came after meeting President Michel Aoun at Baabda Palace for talks on the matter. On Monday, Lebanon's parliament approved a bill that suspends banking secrecy laws for one year to allow for a forensic audit of the central bank, a key demand of international donors. The vote came in accordance with a November decision by parliament to clear hurdles obstructing a forensic audit of the central bank and public institutions. The International Monetary Fund and France are among creditors demanding the audit as part of urgent reforms to unlock financial support, as the country faces a grinding economic crisis. But the central bank has claimed that provisions including Lebanon's Banking Secrecy Law prevent it from releasing some of the necessary information. New York-based Alvarez and Marsal, a consultancy firm formerly tasked with the audit, scrapped its agreement with the government in November because the central bank had failed to hand over required data. The move sparked widespread criticism of Lebanon's authorities. The country, which defaulted on its debt this year, is experiencing its worst economic crisis in decades and is still reeling from a devastating explosion at Beirut's port that gutted entire neighborhoods of the capital on August 4. The dire economic straits and the explosion have both been widely blamed on government corruption and incompetence.

President Aoun signs decree transferring credit to purchase Covid19 vaccines from Pfizer

NNA/December 23/2020
President Michel Aoun signed a decree transferring credit for the purchase of vaccines against Corona pandemic, from Pfizer company. Public health Minister, Dr. Hamad Hassan, will proceed with necessary measures to sign the contract between the Lebanese state and the producing company.-Presidency Press Office

Hariri Meets Aoun, Says No New Government before Holidays
Naharnet/December 23/2020
Prime Minister-designate Saad Hariri announced Wednesday that “clear complications” are still delaying the formation of the new government. “I was hoping to have a government before the holidays but there are still clear complications,” Hariri told reporters after holding talks with President Michel Aoun in Baabda -- their second meeting in two days. “I will not stop before I form a government and confidence must be rebuilt,” Hariri added, warning that “there is no time left” and that “the country is collapsing rapidly.” Addressing Lebanese citizens, Hariri said: “Let no one tell you that we can’t halt the collapse, but we need a government of specialists to stop this collapse.”“I will keep insisting on a government of specialists and the president also wants a government of specialists,” he added.ة Urging “modesty” and “sacrifices for Lebanon,” the PM-designate called on officials to “think of citizens and those affected by the (Beirut port) blast.”“We are capable of halting the collapse, but we must show modesty and think of the country’s interest and the government must be formed after New Year,” Hariri added. A statement issued by the Presidency meanwhile said that "no final agreement was reached during the meeting." "It has been decided to continue the consultations in future meetings," the statement added. Sources informed on the meeting meanwhile told al-Jadeed TV that "the government must be balanced so that it manages to shoulder the responsibilities requested from it in the coming period."
"No agreement was reached over the obstacle of the interior and justice portfolios," the sources added, noting that "the line-up was discussed in light of the points raised yesterday, especially as to having capable, productive and effective ministers."

Hariri hopes for government after New Year: We want ministers who would tell us ‘no’ when we are wrong
NNA/December 23/2020
After meeting with President Michel Aoun at Baabda Palace this afternoon, Prime Minister-designate Saad Hariri said: “We were hoping to have a government earlier. There still are clear complications, but I tell you one thing: Don’t let anyone tell you that we are unable to stop the collapse. Most importantly, this collapse needs a government to stop it. It needs a government of specialists in order to implement the reform that we want, his Excellency the President, all the Lebanese and I. Thus, I call on everyone to realize that I will not spare any effort until a government of specialists is formed and this is what the President also wants. The disagreement is over other issues and may be due to the trust that may have been lost during the past year, and which we must rebuild between the parties. But everyone should know that the politicians don't have time anymore, and the politicians also need to know that the country is collapsing very quickly. Accelerating the formation of a government is fundamental, provided that it is a government of specialists and experts who know what they are doing, without being politicized.”He added: “The minister whom I will name does not need to be someone I have known for a long time. This person who will be named to that ministry must really be a specialist, and his focus should be on reform and not on what Saad Hariri wants. And if Saad Hariri tells him one day ‘do this and do not do that’, then he should tell him that this method is wrong and we are required to carry out the reforms in this way and not in a twisted way. We want people who would tell us ‘no’ when we are wrong. We want people from whom we can actually benefit in the interest of the country.”He continued: “Today I tell the Lebanese: We may be late in forming the government, and this matter unfortunately puts pressure on the country. But I know that the President is keen on forming this government, and I also have the same concern. We will continue to work and communicate with each other until this government is formed. But let no one tell the Lebanese that this collapse cannot be stopped. We will work hard to stop the collapse the moment this government is formed. We will take difficult and fast decisions because this is the only way for us to work with our allies abroad and with the international community to bring Lebanon back to where it should be.”Hariri said: “I call on all political parties, wherever they are and regardless of their viewpoint, to focus on one thing. We are in the winter season and the people whose homes were destroyed do not have shelters. We have to form a government as soon as possible, and the Lebanese must feel that there is a safety net to protect them in the country. This cannot be achieved without forming a government. I wish everyone happy feasts and holidays, and I call on all political parties to think about the people during these holidays. To think about the citizens in Baalbek, Keserwan, Akkar, Minnieh, Dinniyeh, the South, to think about the deprived people and the need to have a government. To think about the army, and the fact that the salary of the soldiers and officers reached a very low level. To think about the internal security forces, the administration, all the people who are in need and who have no jobs.”
He concluded: “The greatness of Lebanon lies in the Lebanese. We can stop this collapse but we must be humble and think about the interest of the country, without making the interest of one party prevail over others. We have to think in the interest of a nation that deserves sacrifices from all of us. I am not here to challenge any political party. It is a moment of reflection that we should all take because after the New Year there should be a new government. The Lebanese citizen does not want to keep seeing Saad Hariri going to the Presidential palace and coming out without a government.”

Presidency Information Office denies what was broadcast by “Al Jadeed”: “MP Bassil has no role in forming the government”
NNA/December 23/2020
The Presidency Information Office denied what "Al Jadeed" reported this evening about the alleged role of the head of the "Free Patriotic Movement", MP Gebran Bassil, in "obstructing" the formation of the upcoming government. The Information Office indicates that the Presidency of the Republic had previously confirmed repeatedly that there is no third party in the process of discussing government formation which occurs between the President of the Republic General Michel Aoun and the Premier-designate Saad Hariri. On the other hand, MP Bassil affirmed that he will not participate in the discussion of forming the government, however “Al Jadeed” insists on involving the name of MP Bassil in the governmental issue in a clear and repeated attempt to spread lies aimed at offending the constitutional process of forming the government, as well as other targets that are no longer hidden. The Information Office of the Lebanese Presidency confirms that the fabricated news which was published this evening in the introduction of “Al Jadeed" news bulletin, falls within the framework of the misinformation policy adopted by this station, which no longer fools anyone.—Presidency Press Office

Center House Sources Slam 'Bats of the Palace'
Naharnet/December 23/2020
Information “leaked from the Baabda Palace” prior to PM-designate Saad Hariri’s visit on Tuesday created a “negative atmosphere” prior to the meeting with President Michel Aoun, Center House sources said. “The positive atmosphere that PM-designate Hariri spoke of followed a direct request from President Aoun, who urged him to make a statement about the presence of positivities that needed completion,” al-Jadeed TV quoted the sources as saying on Wednesday, following a second meeting between Aoun and Hariri. “But the bats of the palace moved at night to disrupt the atmosphere and prepare for a new round of complication, as has been the case since the designation” of Hariri, the sources added. The sources accordingly cautioned the Lebanese public opinion of “attempts to distort facts that are being launched by some associates, advisers and specialists in political and constitutional obstruction.”“Hariri has not and will not back down from the stance that he announced prior and after designation on the need for the formation of a government of specialists that conducts reforms in all sectors and halts the economic and social collapse,” the sources added. “Any attempt to impose a government to which partisan orientations sneak will not succeed, no matter how much they try,” the sources stressed.

Report: ‘Positive’ Atmospheres Emerge After Aoun-Hariri Meeting
Naharnet/December 23/2020
Prime Minister-designate Saad Hariri and President Michel Aoun held their 13th meeting on the government formation, after which the PM reflected “positive” atmospheres, vowing to form a government before Christmas, the Saudi Asharq el-Awsat reported on Wednesday. Hariri said he will meet Aoun again today. Although sources close to the Presidency assured to the daily that the atmospheres between the two men were indeed positive, they ruled out the possibility that a government could be formed Wednesday. “A lengthy discussion about all the details took place, and the President asked the PM-designate to rethink the previous (government) list and how the sects were represented in a fair way, so that he would return afterwards to discuss it,” they told the daily on condition of anonymity. Aoun-Hariri meeting came after “mediation” efforts exerted by Maronite Patriarch Beshara el-Rahi and General Security chief Maj. Gen. Abbas Ibrahim. Aoun and his son-in-law, head of the Free Patriotic Movement Jebran Bassil had reportedly demanded ministerial seats in the new government that gives them powers to veto government decisions. Hariri rejected that demand, and so did the Patriarch. A basic hurdle was also their demand to retain the ministerial portfolios of justice, interior and defense.

Arslan Says 18-seat Cabinet ‘Marginalizes’ Druze Community

Naharnet/December 23/2020
Head of the Lebanese Democratic Party on Wednesday expressed dismay at the chances that a new government could be formed of 18 ministerial seats instead of 20, which would grant the Druze community one seat instead of two. “We heard yesterday there is a progress in the formation (of a government) which has become a necessary need for the Lebanese in these exceptional circumstances the country is passing through,” said Arslan in a tweet. Adding, but “that must not be at the expense of the Druze and their marginalization. We hold the presidents responsible for the prejudice that will afflict us as a sect in the government of 18 ministers,” he said. Arslan said he did voice preferences that a government of 16 or 20 cabinet seats grants the Druze “proper” representation.

4 Suspects Arrested over Torching of Christmas Tree in North
Naharnet/December 23/2020
Four people were arrested Wednesday on suspicion of torching a Christmas tree in northern Lebanon, the National News Agency said. "Army intelligence agents arrested four people suspected of having torched a Christmas tree yesterday morning in the town of Seer al-Dinniyeh," NNA added. The intelligence agents carried out several raids in the town, the agency said, adding that the four suspects are being interrogated.

Army Chief Meets Chief of Staff of the French Armies in Yarzé

Naharnet/December 23/2020
Lebanese Army chief, General Joseph Aoun, welcomed at his Yarze office on Wednesday, the Chief of Staff of the French Armies General François Lecointre leading a delegation, the National News Agency reported. The meeting was held in the presence of French Ambassador to Lebanon, Anne Grillo, said NNA. The agency said that talks featured high on the bilateral cooperation ties between the Lebanese and French armies. Media reports said Lecointre’s visit came to compensate for the visit of French President Emmanuel Macron, which he canceled after retracting coronavirus. His agenda will not include any activity towards political officials, but is limited to his meeting with the Army chief at a direct request from Macron to convey a special message from the French President, said al-Markazia Central News Agency. According to unnamed sources, the message conveys the French state's insistence on considering the Lebanese army under its current leadership, a safety valve for Lebanon, with emphasis on France's permanent and continuous support.France aims to make clear that its main reliance is on the Lebanese Army and its role in this difficult time in Lebanon's history, the added.

Berri receives Central Bank Governor, extends holiday well wishes to the Lebanese
NNA/December 23/2020
Speaker of the House, Nabih Berri, on Wednesday welcomed Lebanese Central Bank Governor, Riad Salameh, with whom he discussed the financial situation and stressed the need for the implementation of laws approved in Parliament, especially those involving forensic and financial audit, the fight against corruption, and squandering public funds. On another level, the House Speaker extended his heartfelt holiday wishes to the Lebanese, hoping that this occasion will witness the new birth of Lebanon, "the homeland, the message, and the human."Berri later met with Caretaker Energy Minister, Raymond Ghajar, who briefed him on the details and results of his Iraq visit.

There is precious little joy to be found in Lebanon this Christmas
Najia Houssari/Arab News/December 24, 2020
The coronavirus is the least of the problems for many people trying to survive amid a devastating economic crisis with no end in sight
As families struggle to afford the basics after the currency crash, ‘luxuries’ such as gifts for children and a festive meal are out of their reach
BEIRUT: Christmas arrives in Lebanon this year accompanied by several crises.
The streets and markets have been packed with last-minute Christmas shoppers in recent days but this is not a sign of an improving economy or a sense of joy among the people. Instead it reflected a desperate search for the cheapest possible shopping options.
Salaries in Lebanon lost about 80 percent of their value this year against the dollar. They can no longer cover even the costs of basic necessities, the prices of which have skyrocketed, so how can they possibly pay for festive “luxuries” such as gifts for children and a hearty Christmas dinner?
“100,000 Lebanese pounds ($66) is not enough to buy laundry detergent, toothpaste and shampoo,” said Souad, a resident of Forn El-Chebbak in the southern suburbs of Beirut. “So, how can a person whose salary was LBP800,000 pay for the remaining basic necessities of life, along with food and drink?
“I am trying to convince my children to be satisfied with just one gift this year. We have to make do with what we have — and we do not think that next year will be any better.”
Toys and gifts for children that cost about LBP20,000 before the currency’s collapse now cost LBP120,000 or more. Meanwhile the prices of imported toys from well-known foreign brands have increased from LBP45,000 to LBP250,000.
The costs of gifts for adults are even more prohibitive — a good-quality pair of shoes that used to sell for up to LBP300,000 now costs more than LBP1 million.
“There is a weekly decline affecting our business, which has reached almost 90 percent,” said Ghassan, who owns a jewelry store. “A person who used to be able to buy a necklace for $200, or LBP300,000, a year ago now has to pay LBP1.6 million, which is three times the country’s minimum wage.”
While the threat to health from the coronavirus crisis should not be trivialized, the pandemic might to some extent prove to be a financial blessing in disguise in Lebanon, as families will be able to reduce the cost of Christmas meals by avoiding large family gatherings.
Expensive meats, extravagant deserts and imported cheeses will be absent from most festive tables this year. A charcuterie plate containing 200 grams of three types of cheese and a selection of processed meats now costs LBP350,000, compared with LBP60,000 last year.
Turkey, a Christmas-dinner tradition in Lebanon, used to cost an average of about LBP150,000 in a restaurant. Now the price of a cooked turkey delivered to your home is at least LBP750,000 — and could be as high as LBP1.3 million depending on the side dishes ordered with it.
As for sweet treats for dessert, the price of a kilogram of high-quality chocolate now exceeds LBP120,00, while a luxury Christmas cake can cost as much as LBP1 million.
“This year’s Christmas celebrations are different as there are no foreign meals on the tables or imported gifts,” said Beirut resident Joelle Daniel. “We are buying local products and focusing on educational children gifts manufactured by Lebanese designers.
“Everyone is suffering economically and we have to make do with what we have. This year was a bad one and we do not think that 2021 will be any better. My family and I have started to prepare our immigration papers because the economic, social and political situation (in Lebanon) is very dire.
“The revolution did not achieve any of our ambitions and then the blast at Beirut’s port happened, which revealed the extent to which our state is corrupt.”
Many of those who already left Lebanon in search of a better life abroad have returned to the country to spend Christmas with their families. In the past few days more than 7,000 people have come back to Beirut for the holidays, and more than 8,000 have arrived since the start of the month. But the visitors are unlikely to bring much seasonal good cheer for struggling businesses.
“The economic activity that has accompanied the holidays has had a limited effect,” said Ghassan Abou Jaoude, who owns a clothes shop near the Palace of Justice in Beirut. “When the holidays are over, every merchant will have to compare his losses and profits and will find that staying at home is less costly than accumulating more debts.
“This is because people simply no longer have money, while all of our political leaders have abandoned their people, prefer to obey the wishes of foreign powers and refuse to make any concessions in the face of such fateful national issues.”

Beirut port explosion: Nearly five months on, residents’ trauma has healed little

Najia Houssari/Arab News/December 24, 2020
BEIRUT: Christmas carols can be heard in the Beirut neighborhoods of Mar Mikhael and Gemmayzeh, stricken by the explosion of the city’s port almost five months ago, as restaurant and coffee shop owners and civil society organizations attempt to give some Christmas cheer to thousands of deserted residents.
People gather daily to light candles for the victims of the explosion. Their houses are still destroyed, missing walls, windows and doors. Nylon curtains have replaced the shattered glass and do little to keep out the cold air and rain.
Roy Bassil lost his father in the explosion while he was at home in Mar Mikhael, opposite the port. His mother was heavily injured. “Our lives were turned upside-down,” he said. “I pulled my father’s body from under the rubble after two walls fell on him. My mother, my aunt and I all moved to Jounieh, where we are renting an apartment until we can restore our house. Civil society organizations are helping us, but the money allocated to our house was quickly drained due to heavy damage. Even the furniture was completely destroyed, and I do not know how I will be able to continue the restoration. I am an accountant, and my work has stopped due to the economic crisis the country is going through.”
Bassil is like many others in the country who are still suffering from shock and deep frustration. “We feel as though we have been abandoned to our fate, no state to protect us. We will not forgive anyone for what they have done to us. How could we forgive? On Christmas Eve, we will pray in the church. This is our first holiday like this. We have never had such a bitter experience, not even at the peak of the Civil War.”
Bassil lives in East Beirut, which forms 30 percent of the capital and has a Christian majority. According to personal status registers, 72 percent of residents in the capital are Muslims, while 28 percent are Christians. The number of Christians in West Beirut declined during the Lebanese Civil War as the majority either emigrated from Lebanon or moved to other regions, rendering their presence in West Beirut symbolic. According to a member of the Beirut Municipality Council, Khalil Choucair, “Christians are heavily represented in commercial businesses, restaurants, pubs and hotels. Christians in Beirut were the backbone of the protests last year. They joined civil rather than party frames. The explosion of the Port of Beirut was a severe blow to them, and the emigration of Christian youth is an expression of their state of despair.”
Guy Donikian stands in front of his bookstore to observe Mar Mikhael Street. He inherited the bookstore, where he sells stationery and office supplies, from his father. A printing press is located behind the shop. Both were founded in 1924. “Everything was destroyed,” Donikian said. “I repaired it all, and I just want to move on with my life.
“After the explosion, I could not sleep for a month and a half. Everything comes back to me whenever I close my eyes. The holidays in this region this year are sad. People’s houses are destroyed, and their hearts are broken. We need time to heal from the trauma.”
The damage from the explosion of the port, however, is only one problem facing the country.
“The economic situation and the new pandemic have only magnified our misery,” Donikian said. “Had I been 25 years old, I would have emigrated like all the youth are doing. After the age of 50, however, it is hard for me to rebuild myself in the diaspora.”
The dire economic crisis in Lebanon has made a fragile situation worse.
“The price of gift-wrapping paper has become LBP 12,000 ($8). Who can buy it at that price? It used to sell for only LBP 3,000. I have not sold anything yet, even with the holidays approaching. This means that people are not buying gifts. The atmosphere is sad, and there is no money in people’s pockets. The biggest trip someone can take is to the supermarket to buy food. Everything else has become a luxury.”
A number of restaurants and pub owners in Mar Mikhael and Gemmayzeh reopened after being restored. The pubs are crowded with old and new customers, which adds some joy to the area that was once a nightlife hotspot, bustling with jazz music fans.
Charbel, who works at the Bohemian Bar, said: “There are good vibes and good potential in the street. The pub customers have changed, though. Young people have traveled in search of jobs. What they earn has lost 80 percent of its value due to the depreciation of the Lebanese lira. Only those who are well off come to our pub.”
Jacqueline insisted on staying in her home, despite the destruction around her. “There was huge damage to our house, but we restored it all and we live in it with dignity now. Our losses are many, but we have faith in God, which makes us stand strong. After the explosion, this region, which was supposed to be for the wealthy, has ended up hosting families in need.”When asked whether she forgives those responsible for the tragedy, she said: “My religion tells me to forgive, but when I see the gravity of the disaster, I say that I will not forgive. God forgives. On Christmas Eve, I will go to church to pray. We will not be gathering as a family because of the pandemic, and I did not buy gifts. I usually help Iraqi families who have sought refuge in Lebanon, but this year I only bought candies for children because the situation is abnormal.
“Who can console the families of the victims? People are depressed, and pharmacies say that their most-wanted medicines are for depression and panic attacks. The youth have either emigrated or are thinking of emigration. The corrupt are still in power and do not want reform.”
Kris Kashoush is a young Lebanese man living in Mar Mikhael. He said that the explosion of the port generated in him “unlimited anger.”“People should have gone to politicians’ houses and killed them the same way people were killed in their own houses due to their negligence. I have decided to leave. Those who killed my ambition, destroyed my dreams, stole my country and wanted to exterminate my people are the same ones who made me put the flag of my country in my suitcase and carry it with me to the diaspora.
“I am one of the people who participated in the protests, but I have lost all hope in Lebanon and the Lebanese. We should never forget what happened on Aug. 4. It is true that people want to move on with their lives, but we should never accept what happened.”
Some of the churches that were destroyed in Beirut have been restored, while the reconstruction of others is still underway. Father Boulos Abdel Sater, the curial bishop of the Maronite Catholic Patriarchate of Antioch in Beirut, said in his Sunday sermon before Christmas: “We, the people of Beirut, will stay in the city, even if the work of reconstruction and restoration never end. Our decision is clear: No one can evict us from our homes, and we will not sell them either.”

What photographer Joe Bejjani’s death says about the dark days to come for Lebanon
Makram Rabah/Al Arabiya/December 23/2020
When Lebanese photographer Joe Bejjani got ready to drop his children off at school, the last thing he expected was to be ambushed by two masked assailants who would gun him down as he got into his vehicle.
The gruesome slaying of Bejjani rocked Lebanon and forewarned of very darks days to come. The hit on Bejjani is the third homicide in the last six months that resembled a hit job. A former anti-smuggling customs authority, Mounir Abu Rjeily, stationed at the Beirut port, which exploded in August, was found dead earlier this month. In June, a high-ranking bank executive was found dead in the parking lot of his home.
Bejjani, a 37-year-old freelance photographer and former Alfa telecom employee, one of Lebanon’s mobile operators, had no real enemies and his hobby of photographing military vehicles and parades led him to take on freelance jobs with the Lebanese army and several publications which cover military issues.
The hit on Bejjani was recorded by surveillance cameras from his apartment building and clearly showed a professional squad executing a planned hit. The team kept their backs to the camera, but they wore no gloves and seemed unafraid to leave their fingerprints on the crime scene, but they spent 15 second’s searching Bejjani’s car to retrieve his cell phone before disappearing into an adjacent secluded road where they were met with their getaway vehicle.
Despite being a card carrying member of the Lebanese Forces party, Bejjani lacked the seniority or the profile for his murder to be a political message. His former job at Alfa telecom was largely based on logistics, and he had no access to any security data which could have exposed him to any real danger.
Bejjani, sources have said, was one of the first people to arrive at the port following the deadly explosion and he was hired by the Lebanese Army and the international committee investigating the port blast to take forensic pictures, which according to the general public put his live in danger.
Beyond the recent targeted killings, Colonel Joseph Skaff, former Chief of the drug control division at the Lebanese Customs who died suspiciously in 2017, called for the removal of the 2,750 tons of ammonium nitrate which arrived at the Port of Beirut in 2013 that would cause the explosion this year.
The deaths of Bejjani, Rjeily, and Skaff all converge on Hezbollah’s alleged connection to the Beirut port explosion.
Bejjani’s assassination confirms that a professional outfit was involved, one which has no trouble operating in a purely Christian area such as the victim’s village of Kehaleh, revealing their unlimited resources. More importantly, this revealed that they are out of reach of the Lebanese security apparatuses, if not part of it. Moreover, Bejjani’s slaying drew parallel images to the many assassinations starting in 2005, with the murder of former Prime Minister Rafiq Hariri and dozens of anti-Syrian and anti-Iranian politicians, murders which are yet to be uncovered.
Interestingly, a few weeks back, the High Council of Defense warned of potential assassination attempts against a number of politicians, though it stopped short of naming potential targets. The vague warning created a gale of confusion and criticism, with Lebanese pointing to the state’s inability to protect its people.It is no coincidence that the ruling establishment that issued such a disclaimer ultimately failed to protect life, liberty and property – the three essential items that regulate any type of social contract between Lebanese citizens and the state. Such a disclaimer feels more like an implicit admittance of failure, rather than an effort to protect.
Although Bejjani was killed by a silencer, the three bullets that ended this young man’s life were loud enough to remind Lebanese what is really at stake in today’s Lebanon, and that no one is safe, no matter where they go and what they do. In a tragic twist of fate, Bejjani was preparing to emigrate to Canada with his family, and the blood-stained immigration papers found in his car serve as another cruel reminder that for those who try to challenge the political elite, escaping Lebanon – and the darkness that is surely coming – is a futile endeavor.
* Makram Rabah is a lecturer at the American University of Beirut, Department of History. His book Conflict on Mount Lebanon: The Druze, the Maronites and Collective Memory (Edinburgh University Press) covers collective identities and the Lebanese Civil War.
 

The Latest English LCCC Miscellaneous Reports And News published on December 22-23/2020

Silent night for Bethlehem as coronavirus keeps pilgrims away
HAZEM BALOUSHA//Arab News/December 23/2020
his month Bethlehem lit the Christmas tree to mark the start of the Christmas holidays
GAZA CITY: Palestinian authorities will continue following the “usual protocol” in their Christmas celebrations, despite the increasing number of people infected with coronavirus in the Palestinian territories.
But the celebrations will not happen in their normal form - in the presence of pilgrims from around the world and Palestinian Christians. Instead they will be limited to a small number of officials and clerics. Anton Salman is the mayor of Bethlehem, where the largest Christmas celebrations are held.  He said this year would be different because the city would not witness the regular festivities, despite the decision to go ahead with the religious rituals. “We cannot cancel all celebrations, but the usual protocol will continue to be followed, but the public's attendance will be limited while following safety and prevention measures,” Salman told Arab News. Normally there are many celebrations, starting with the lighting of Christmas trees and continuing until religious rites are held in the Church of the Nativity on Christmas Eve in addition to other activities, the most important of which is the holding of carols in Manger Square by international and local groups. These performances are canceled this year. Earlier this month Bethlehem lit the Christmas tree to mark the start of the Christmas holidays, with the participation of Palestinian Prime Minister Muhammad Shtayyeh via video call. The tree was lit without public participation or revelers in the square, in compliance with the health measures being followed to tackle COVID-19. Attendance was limited to social media and the presence of a few people and members of the municipality. “Together we defeated international plans to annex our land and legalize settlements, and we will defeat settlement and occupation, and we presented a message about political steadfastness in the face of the colonial occupation pandemic, and the seizure of our money, and a message on national steadfastness in the face of the disease pandemic,” Shtayyeh said during the ceremony. “The Palestinian has lived the pain of the past, with courage and defiance, living the present, and hoping for a better future surrounded by patience and resistance toward the state, toward a free and full Palestine united with its people.”This Christmas, Bethlehem is empty of the foreign tourists who used to flock to it and other Palestinian cities throughout the year.
“Last year this square marked Christmas with a solemn celebration, with a distinguished presence, and with official, popular and international participation and today, as we celebrate Christmas, we seek it with hope and optimism,” Salman added. “So we resorted to modern technology and the virtual world to celebrate the lighting of the Christmas tree, hoping that hope and optimism would continue to flutter around Palestine and the world.”The mayor said there was a commitment to safety standards in order to protect everyone and that the city had chosen a slogan that differed from previous years.
“We wish the light of life for everyone on our level as Palestinians, and the world, to get rid of the pandemic.” Other Palestinian cities, Ramallah and Jerusalem, witnessed the lighting of Christmas trees during December in the presence of a limited number of church officials and clerics. The Palestinian territories have recorded more than 120,000 cases of coronavirus since March, with the first cases being recorded in Bethlehem, while the number of infections has recently increased in West Bank cities. The Palestinian government imposed strict measures during the past two weeks in West Bank cities to limit the spread of coronavirus, including the comprehensive closure of some cities, the separation of governorates, and the partial closure of official institutions.

 

No Merry Christmas Vacation for Enraged Trump
Agence France Presse/December 23/2020
An enraged Donald Trump helicopters off from the White House lawn Wednesday for one of the last times in his presidency, leaving Americans chaos as a Christmas present. The Republican is bound with his wife Melania for a vacation in his lavish Mar-a-Lago resort in Florida. From Marine One, the first couple will get a magnificent view of the White House, decorated in chocolate box fashion with Christmas wreaths and red ribbons at every window. But with the clock ticking to Joe Biden's January 20 inauguration, there won't be too many more occasions to enjoy the experience. And Trump, consumed by election conspiracy theories, abandoned by allies, and determined to take opponents down with him, is not exactly in a merry mood. Crises engulf the man supporters call "disrupter in chief" ("chaos president" to his critics.)
Most of them are of his own making:
- Trying to overturn the result of the election.
- Unexpectedly refusing to sign a massive economic relief bill for Americans struggling from coronavirus fallout, insisting at the last moment that it be rewritten.
- Choosing to say nothing, other than to play it down, about what senior officials and members of Congress describe as a devastating Russian cyberattack.
- Threatening to veto the bill funding the US military.
- Declaring war on top members of his own party because they dared to concede that Biden won.
- Diminished figure -
Yet for all his bluster, the larger than life showman who for four years held the media, his party and the entire country in thrall now cuts a diminished figure.
Normally, the departure on Marine One from the South Lawn of the White House has been a favorite stage for Trump to act out his flamboyant press conference/performance art routine. Boasting, ad-libbing, entertaining and insulting, Trump used to love nothing more than "chopper talk" with journalists jostling to hear the world's biggest media star against the roar of an idling military helicopter. But since losing the November 3 election and embarking on a desperate mission to reverse the result, Trump has almost vanished from public engagements. His last extended Q&A with journalists was a bad tempered Thanksgiving encounter on November 26.
The once epic Marine One departures have been whittled down to the perfunctory exercise of a man catching a ride to the airport. With Covid-19 restrictions, only around a dozen journalists can attend the sessions anyway, meaning that even if Trump decides to stop and talk, the old, manic energy is gone. Officially scheduled White House meetings -- exceedingly rare since the election -- are held off camera, unlike before, when Trump routinely invited in reporters. Even Tuesday night's bombshell threat to nix the Covid relief package was made in a pre-recorded video posted on Twitter, all out of sight of the White House press corps.
Unhinged from 'reality?
Many explanations are being thrown around for Trump's extraordinary post-election behavior. Ardent supporters say Trump is simply exercising the legal right to pursue his claim -- however far-fetched -- that "IT WAS A RIGGED ELECTION!!!" as he tweeted Tuesday. Ardent critics, citing talk by a Trump ally of bringing in the military to rerun the election, say he is a wannabe dictator. A less dramatic appraisal is that Trump is just following his salesman's instincts. Determined to keep his brand alive post-January, Trump is cynically doing what he does best: hogging the limelight, outraging the establishment and delighting his passionate base. But this week an intriguing fourth option was suggested by influential, Trump-supporting televangelist Pat Robertson:
That Trump inhabits "an alternate reality" in which he genuinely believes everything he says. "He really does," Robertson explained Monday on the Christian Broadcasting Network. "People say, 'Well he lies about this, that and the other.' But he isn't lying," Robertson said. "To him, that's the truth."
 

WHO: Almost 4.6 million new cases were reported to WHO last week
NNA/December 23/2020
Globally, almost 4.6 million new cases were reported to WHO last week, another new high record since the beginning of the pandemic, with a record 78 000 new deaths reported last week. Total cases reported to WHO have surpassed 75 million and there have been over 1.6 million deaths.
In a press briefing, WHO Director-General said the following:
"At the regional level, we have been seeing an overall trend of cases and deaths decreasing in the last few weeks, with 15 out of 22 countries reporting decreasing cases, and 13 countries reporting decreasing deaths.
We continue to work closely with all countries in the Region to monitor the situation and provide specific guidance and recommendations to enhance response interventions. The coming weeks are critical, as we mark a time when people traditionally gather to celebrate the holiday season and temperatures drop even further in winter.As part of its updated guidance on mask use in the context of COVID-19, WHO advises the use of masks as part of a comprehensive package of prevention and control measures to limit the spread of the virus. Especially in indoor settings, masks should be worn if air ventilation is poor, or where physical distancing is not possible. I urge people in the Region to avoid non-essential travel and large gatherings in order to limit the spread of the virus and prevent COVID-19 surges. While we know that this will require sacrifices and compromises, the holiday season should not provide an excuse to relax the social measures aimed to decrease spread of the virus. We are all closely following the good news that recently came at the end of this difficult year. COVID-19 vaccines are finally within reach, with several breakthroughs on the horizon. Three safe and efficacious vaccines have been developed in record time and vaccination roll-out has already commenced, including in our region. WHO is working with partners to ensure the equitable availability of the vaccine, including to low-middle income countries and low income countries.
The coming period in our Region will be challenging for us all, and making sure that we reduce fear, stigma and hesitancy will be key. We count on you, the media, as key partners, to play a critical role in ensuring that your coverage about COVID-19 vaccines is informed and based on the facts. This is not the time to be sensationalist or look for the headlines. Last week, South African and UK health officials informed WHO and the public about different variants of the virus that causes COVID-19 circulating in their countries. As of 22 December, the UK variant has been detected in small numbers in Australia, Denmark, Italy, Iceland and the Netherlands. While both variants have one common change, the virus variants reported from South Africa and the UK are different and sequence analysis revealed that they originated separately.
The UK has reported that this new variant transmits more easily but there is no indication so far that it is more likely to cause severe disease, or have an impact on vaccines. Studies are underway to determine if the increased spread is associated with the virus variant itself or changes in people's behaviour over the past several months, or a combination of both. Viruses change as they circulate, and these changes can lead to changes in characteristics of the virus. Yet while the viruses change, the way we can protect ourselves remain the same, and these measures must be followed diligently, now more than ever, to help slow and eventually stop the virus spread. Variants identified in UK and South Africa highlight the importance of sequencing of SARS-CoV-2 and sharing of sequence data internationally. A number of countries in our Region have the capacity to conduct sequencing of SARS-CoV-2 viruses, and I advise these countries to increase sequencing where possible and to share their data internationally. In countries with no sequencing capacity, WHO will facilitate the transfer of positive specimens to international WHO COVID-19 collaborating centers for advanced testing.
The more we know about this virus, the more chance we have to better control it. We need to suppress transmission of all SARS-CoV-2 viruses as quickly as we can, before they have more opportunity to change and spread.
As we prepare to celebrate over the coming weeks, we should take every precaution to keep ourselves and others safe, especially those of us living in areas with high COVID-19 transmission.
We need to follow through on our commitments as individuals, as communities and as governments in the coming months: to continue to build public health surveillance, to work with communities, to maintain public health and social measures, to continue to take those actions to be able to protect ourselves and our loved ones and save lives. We can keep the transmission down by knowing and lowering our risk. This is the best gift we can all give each other: the gift of health, life, and hope for a safer, better future
."
 

Global Virus Rules for Christmas: Tough, Mild or None at All
Associated Press/December 23/2020
In Peru, you can't drive your car on Christmas. In Lebanon, you can go to a nightclub, but you can't dance. In South Africa, roadblocks instead of beach parties will mark this year's festive season. How many people can you share a Christmas meal with? France recommends no more than six, in Chile it's 15, and in Brazil it's as many as you want. Meanwhile, Italy's mind-boggling, color-coded holiday virus rules change almost every day for the next two weeks. Countries around the world are trying to find the right formulas to keep their people safe for Christmas, especially as new virus variants prompt renewed travel bans and fuel resurgent infections, hospitalizations and deaths at the end of an already devastating year. Here's a look at some of the restrictions around the world for the holiday season:
BRITAIN
It was meant to be a time when families across the U.K. could enjoy something like a normal Christmas despite the pandemic. Authorities planned to relax restrictions, allowing up to three households to mix in the days around Dec. 25. The emergence of a new, more contagious variant of the coronavirus changed that. The four nations of the U.K. – England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland – are all in various states of shutdown and have ditched their Christmas plans. No indoor mixing of households is allowed in London and southeast England. Instead of Christmas joy, a sense of dread and isolation is looming. Dozens of countries have limited flights from Britain, and daily new infections are running at record highs. Hospitals across the U.K., which has Europe's second-highest virus-related death toll at over 68,000, are heading towards capacity at a time of year when other illnesses abound.
BRAZIL
In Brazil, Christmas 2020 will look much like normal – even though the country has been among the world's hardest-hit by the pandemic and new COVID-19 infections are now on track to match the peak of the first surge. Many beaches and restaurants in Rio de Janeiro were packed last weekend, despite a city measure forbidding drivers to park along the shore. No national restrictions have been imposed ahead of Christmas, though the governor of São Paulo ordered that only essential services such as public transport, supermarkets and pharmacies remain open around Christmas and New Year's Eve.
Sao Paulo, Rio de Janeiro and Salvador have also called off their Dec. 31 firework displays.
SOUTH AFRICA
South Africa is targeting beaches and booze as it imposes new restrictions for the Christmas season amid resurgent infections. Alcohol can only be sold Monday through Thursday, and a nighttime curfew is in place. Beaches — major tourist attractions this time of year — will be closed on Christmas Eve, Christmas Day and New Year's Day. The government is urging people to avoid crowded Christmas celebrations, but indoor gatherings of up to 100 people are still allowed; outdoors up to 250 people can congregate. Police are setting up roadblocks to slow a second surge of infections that authorities and scientists say is being fueled by another variant of the virus, one distinct from the variant affecting England. Some countries are banning flights from South Africa, where the weekly infections and deaths have doubled over the past two weeks.
LEBANON
Unlike much of the world, Lebanon eased restrictions during the holidays, hoping to inject foreign currency into a tanking economy. Tens of thousands of Lebanese expats have arrived home for the holidays, leading to fears of an inevitable surge in infections.
Last week, the Interior Ministry allowed nightclubs to reopen — but said dancing will be prohibited. That triggered a debate on social media about what constitutes dancing. Lebanon's health sector has been challenged by the pandemic that struck amid an unprecedented financial crisis. The massive Aug. 4 explosion in Beirut's port only increased pressure on the city's hospitals, knocking out at least three of them.
ITALY
Newspapers in Italy are running color-coded graphics that resemble children's board games to help people keep track of the rules aimed at limiting new infections over the holidays. Travel between regions is banned for 16 days, and a curfew begins at 10 p.m.
From Dec. 24-27, "red" rules kick in, closing all shops except food stores, pharmacies and hairdressers – since looking one's best is essential in Italy. Two people can visit the home of another family member and bring children younger than 14 with them. Restaurants and cafes can't serve customers, although takeout and home delivery are allowed. From Dec. 28-30, Italians segue into ''orange" rules, when non-essential shops can re-open, although dining out is still banned. Things turn red again for Dec. 31-Jan. 3, orange for Jan. 4, then red again on Jan. 5-6 for the national holiday on Epiphany.
SOUTH KOREA
South Korea is clamping down on private social gatherings of five or more people and closing tourist spots from Christmas Eve through at least Jan. 3. National parks and coastal tourist sites, where thousands travel to watch the sun rise on the new year, will close. So will churches and skiing, sledding and skating venues. Restaurants could face fines of up to 3 million won ($2,700) if they serve groups of five or more. The greater Seoul area, home to half of the country's 51 million people, has been at the center of a viral resurgence in past weeks that has overwhelmed hospitals, increased death tolls and raised questions as to how the government is handling the outbreak, after winning global praise for its response earlier in the year. Forty-eight COVID-19 patients have died in the deadliest two days since the pandemic began.
THE UNITED STATES
The U.S. has issued no nationwide restrictions on travel, a decision left to state governments, but a federal agency is advising against criss-crossing the country for the Christmas season. Still, millions of people have passed through airport security in recent days. The travel company AAA predicted that nearly 85 million Americans would be journeying during the holidays – a 29% decline from last year. The U.S. has reported by far the most virus infections and deaths in the world, over 18 million cases and 322,800 deaths, according to a tally by Johns Hopkins University. Even before Christmas, new cases have been rising over the past two weeks.

 

UK Discovers Another New Coronavirus Variant
Agence France Presse/December 23/2020
Britain on Wednesday introduced restrictions on travel from South Africa over the spread of another new variant of coronavirus, UK Health Minister Matt Hancock said. The restrictions, which applied with immediate effect, were introduced following the discovery of two cases of the virus strain in Britain. "This new variant is highly concerning, because it is yet more transmissible, and it appears to have mutated further than the new variant that has been discovered in the UK," Hancock said, referring to a strain of the virus discovered in Britain which has also been found to be more contagious.
The health minister said that all individuals in the UK who had contracted the variant originating in South Africa had been placed in quarantine as well as their close contacts. In addition to the travel restrictions, Hancock said the government was also asking anyone who has been in close contact with someone who had been in South Africa in the last two weeks to quarantine. "They must restrict all contact with any other person whatsoever," he said. The discovery of cases of what officials believe is a new, more transmissible variant of the coronavirus in the UK follows the announcement last week that a new strain had spread throughout the south of England. In response to the growing number of coronavirus cases, Britain ordered a series of coronavirus restrictions across the affected areas. More than 50 nations also imposed their own travel restrictions on the UK, including France. A ban on cross-Channel freight to Europe has wrought havoc around the key port of Dover and led to fears of food shortages in the country's supermarkets because of paralysis in supply chains. Hancock on Wednesday announced the expansion of strict lockdown measures across further parts of the south of England to contain the spread of the disease. With more than 68,000 deaths from the virus, the United Kingdom is one of the hardest hit countries in Europe.

 

EU Starts to Ease Bans over UK Virus Strain; WHO to Meet
Agence France Presse/December 23/2020
Europe on Wednesday began lifting travel bans on Britain put in place to contain a new fast-spreading Covid strain while WHO experts were set to meet on a response to it. Meanwhile, in the United States, President Donald Trump rejected a massive Covid economic relief package passed by Congress, branding it "a disgrace" as millions of Americans are suffering fallout from the pandemic. There was however positive news in Australia, where Sydney eased lockdown restrictions for Christmas after the country's largest city reported a second day of new cases in the single digits. The new coronavirus variant has swept the UK and spurred global panic just as vaccines are being rolled out. But the European Commission on Tuesday urged EU nations to lift travel bans imposed on Britain in recent days. The new strain of the virus, which has also been detected in small numbers elsewhere, appears to spread more easily than other types but experts say there is no evidence it is more lethal or resistant to vaccines. The discovery unleashed panic that led to more than two dozen countries suspending UK flights, threatening travel chaos during the holiday season. The European Union instead urged virus tests be carried out on passengers within 72 hours before travel. "Flight and train bans should be discontinued given the need to ensure essential travel and avoid supply chain disruptions," the EU said. France was reopening cross-border travel with Britain Wednesday but a negative Covid-19 test will be required.
The ban on arrivals in France has led to long tailbacks of freight lorries in southern England and has disrupted passenger travel in the run-up to Christmas. The Netherlands also said it was lifting its ban beginning Wednesday but noted that all passengers, including EU citizens, must have a recent negative test to enter. The World Health Organization in Europe said its experts would meet on Wednesday to discuss how to handle the outbreak, saying "limiting travel to contain spread is prudent until we have better info". WHO's Europe director Hans Kluge wrote on Twitter that the organisation would "discuss strategies for testing, reducing transmission & communicating risks". The death toll from the virus surpassed 1.7 million on Tuesday, roughly a year after it emerged in China.
Vaccine can adapt
Germany on Tuesday extended its ban on arrivals from the UK -- as well as South Africa, where a similar variant has been found -- until January 6. Health Minister Jens Spahn said that "as long as it is possible", Germany aims to prevent "potentially dangerous virus mutations from spreading in continental Europe". The European Union is preparing its rollout of the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine on Sunday, following similar vaccination campaigns in the UK and the US. Mexico said it would start its Covid vaccinations on Thursday. The co-founder of BioNTech said on Tuesday it was "highly likely" that its vaccine would work against the mutated strain detected in Britain. And if not, the vaccine could be adapted in six weeks, said Ugur Sahin, adding that tests are already being run on the variant. In the US, the world's worst-affected country, top infectious disease specialist Anthony Fauci received his Covid-19 vaccine as officials continued to seek to build confidence among the public. But Trump's rejection of the $900 billion Covid relief package passed overwhelmingly by Congress led to concern, though lawmakers can override his veto if he goes through with it.
UK shortage fears -
Britain has become increasingly isolated, and one of the biggest concerns was France's ban on freight traffic as part of a 48-hour blockade on the movement of people across the English Channel. Late Tuesday, UK Transport Secretary Grant Shapps announced Britain and France had settled on a protocol that "will see the French border reopen to those travelling for urgent reasons, provided they have a certified negative COVID test." French Transport Minister Jean-Baptiste Djebarri also confirmed that air travel, boats and Eurostar trains would "resume service as of tomorrow morning".
Despite the breakthrough in talks, congestion around the key southern port of Dover remains unlikely to recede in the short term. The major British transit hub said it would reopen from midnight local time (2300 GMT) for travellers with a negative result. While Prime Minister Boris Johnson insisted that supply chains were "strong and robust", experts warned that Britain may face shortages of certain fresh foods over Christmas if crossings to France were not reopened Wednesday. Meanwhile, two cardinals close to Pope Francis have contracted Covid-19, according to sources in the Vatican, where efforts were underway to trace their recent contacts. The 84-year-old pope, known for his love of getting close to the faithful, has been reluctant to wear a mask despite the pandemic that has hit Italy hard.


Top US officials discuss options to protect Americans in Iraq from Iran attacks
Reuters/Wednesday 23 December 2020
Top US national security officials agreed on Wednesday on a proposed range of options to present to President Donald Trump aimed at deterring any attack on US military or diplomatic personnel in Iraq, a senior administration official told Reuters. The meeting was spurred by an attack on Dec. 20. At least eight rockets landed in Baghdad’s heavily fortified Green Zone in an attack targeting the US Embassy, causing some minor damage, the Iraqi military and the embassy said on Sunday. The official said the so-called principals committee group of officials, including acting Defense Secretary Chris Miller, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and national security adviser Robert O’Brien, discussed the situation at the White House. They agreed on a “range of options” that will be presented soon to Trump, the official said. The official would not describe the content of the options or say whether they included military options.
“Each one is designed to be non-escalatory and to deter further attack,” the official said. The Iraqi military blamed the Dec. 20 attack on an “outlaw group.” But US officials blame Iran-backed militia for regular rocket attacks on US facilities in Iraq, including near the embassy in Baghdad. No known Iran-backed groups have claimed responsibility. The senior administration official said the aim of the White House meeting was “to develop the right set of options that we could present to the president to make sure that we deter the Iranians and Shia militias in Iraq from conducting attacks on our personnel.” An array of militia groups announced in October that they had suspended rocket attacks on US forces on condition that Iraq’s government present a timetable for the withdrawal of American troops. But a rocket strike on the US Embassy on Nov. 18 was a clear sign that Iranian-backed militias had decided to resume attacks on US bases, according to Iraqi security officials. Washington, which is slowly reducing its 5,000 troops in Iraq, threatened to shut its embassy unless the Iraqi government reins in Iran-aligned militias.


Bahrain Urges End to Regional Disputes as Gulf Summit Looms
Agence France Presse/December 23/2020
Bahrain called Wednesday for an end to regional disputes, the latest statement suggesting a rift between Qatar and four countries could ease ahead of a Gulf summit next month. Manama's Supreme Defense Council, led by King Hamad bin Isa Al-Khalifa, convened on Wednesday and declared a need "to end regional conflicts and disputes by peaceful means", according to the official Bahrain News Agency (BNA). Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain and Egypt cut ties with and initiated an economic blockade against Qatar in June 2017, saying it was too close to Iran and funding radical Islamist movements, charges Doha denies. The Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) -- comprised of the UAE, Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, Oman, Kuwait and Qatar -- will meet on January 5 in Saudi Arabia. The softened rhetoric surrounding the three-year dispute comes amid Riyadh-led efforts to resolve the crisis. Earlier this month, Saudi Foreign Minister Prince Faisal bin Farhan said a resolution was in sight, with the four governments behind the blockade "on board" and a final agreement expected soon. Egypt and the UAE have since given their public support to the negotiations although diplomatic sources say the UAE has been reluctant to compromise. Anwar Gargash, UAE minister of state for foreign affairs, said on Twitter on Wednesday "we look forward to a successful summit in Riyadh that strengthens the Gulf dialogue". Qatar had a longstanding territorial dispute with Bahrain that was only resolved by the International Court of Justice in 2001. Last month, two Bahraini boats breached Qatari territorial waters, Doha's interior ministry said in a statement. Bahrain insisted however that the two vessels, part of its coastguard fleet, had been wrongfully intercepted, adding that "the incident occurred in the territorial waters of the Kingdom of Bahrain." On Sunday, Manama accused Doha of confiscating 47 Bahraini fishing boats, but in a cabinet meeting on Monday "the importance of direct bilateral negotiations with Qatar to reach a lasting agreement" on fishing activities, according to the BNA. Referring to the wider Gulf spat, Qatar's Foreign Minister Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahman Al-Thani said during an official visit to Moscow on Wednesday "no party from this crisis will emerge victorious." "We will all emerge victorious only if a solution is found and trust is rebuilt," he said during a press conference alongside his Russian counterpart.

Israel Parliament Dissolves, Sparking Fourth Election in Two Years
Agence France Presse/December 23/2020
Israel's parliament dissolved on Wednesday after Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's fractured ruling coalition failed to pass a budget, triggering a fourth election in two years and renewing an unprecedented political crisis. The coalition led by Netanyahu and his former election rival, Defence Minister Benny Gantz, had been inching towards collapse for weeks, undermined by mutual acrimony and mistrust. The dissolution of parliament, the Knesset, could see elections held as early as March 23, likely forcing Netanyahu to seek re-election while the coronavirus pandemic is still raging and as his long-awaited corruption trial intensifies. The coalition headed by Netanyahu's right-wing Likud and Gantz's centrist Blue and White party had until midnight to pass a 2020 budget. Failure to do so legally forces parliament's dissolution, Knesset spokesman Uri Michael told AFP on Tuesday. The deadline's expiration marks the end of a troubled political marriage between Netanyahu and Gantz, who faced off in three inconclusive elections in April and September of 2019 and again in March.
Budget battle
They agreed to form a so-called unity government in April. Gantz has said he never trusted Netanyahu, but wanted to spare Israelis a fourth election, especially as the pandemic was gathering pace. The three-year coalition deal had stipulated that Netanyahu serves as premier for 18 months, with Gantz taking over in November 2021.Gantz demanded the government pass a budget covering both 2020 and 2021, arguing Israel, and the coalition, needed stability. But Netanyahu refused to endorse a 2021 budget. That, his critics said, was a political tactic to keep the coalition unstable, making it easier for him to sink the government before he had to yield power to Gantz. "The reason we're heading to an election is because Netanyahu refused to pass a budget as required by law and honour political agreements so that he can remain in power for the duration of his trial," said Yohanan Plesner, the head of the Israel Democracy Institute think-tank. Late Sunday, Blue and White said it had an agreement with Likud on a bill to buy more time to pass the budget. But the Knesset rejected that bill on Tuesday, following yet another round of bitter back-and-fourth between Netanyahu and Gantz.
Lawmakers from Likud and Blue and White both voted against the coalition proposal.
Gantz, currently in precautionary coronavirus quarantine, was unable to vote.
'Risk all around'
Both Netanyahu and Gantz face substantial political risks in new elections, especially if held in March. Political commentators have said Netanyahu always planned to force an election before vacating the premier's office for Gantz, but would have preferred a vote date in June or later. That would have allowed more time to vaccinate the public against the novel coronavirus and hopefully push Israel's economy towards recovery. A March election would compel Netanyahu to campaign in February, when he is due to appear in court multiple times a week for his trial on charges of bribery, fraud and breach of trust. He is accused of accepting improper gifts and seeking to trade favours with media moguls in exchange for positive coverage, but denies wrongdoing. Netanyahu also faces a new challenge from influential right-winger Gideon Saar, who has left Likud to form his own New Hope party. Multiple polls suggest Saar could peel significant support away from Netanyahu if elections were held soon. Netanyahu is expected to highlight recent achievements including a series of US-brokered normalisation agreements with former Arab rival states. But he will no longer be able to boast of his ironclad alliance with outgoing President Donald Trump. Meanwhile, Gantz's political fortunes have plummeted. Blue and White fractured when made a deal with Netanyahu and recent polls suggest the party would win only a handful of seats if elections were held soon. Gantz's former ally, Yair Lapid of the Yesh Atid, became the opposition leader in parliament, but voter surveys indicate Lapid would struggle to form a government.  Overall, prospects for left of centre parties appear dim, possibly complicating any attempt by President-elect Joe Biden's administration to renew Israeli engagement with the Palestinians. "We enter this election with a clear advantage in polls for the political right," Plesner of the IDI said, while stressing "the growing possibility" that a right-wing camp emerges that refuses to accept Netanyahu as prime minister.
 

U.S. imposes fresh sanctions on Syria in push for Assad to end war
WASHINGTON/Reuters/December 23/2020
-The United States on Tuesday slapped fresh sanctions on Syria, targeting its central bank and blacklisting several people and entities in a continued effort to cut off funds for President Bashar al-Assad’s government. The latest action, building on sanctions imposed on Syria earlier this year, marked another round in a U.S. campaign to push Assad’s government back into U.N.-led negotiations to end the country’s nearly decade-long war. “The  United States will  continue to seek accountability for those prolonging this conflict,” U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said in a statement. Millions of people have fled Syria and millions more have been internally displaced since a crackdown by Assad on protesters in 2011 led to civil war with Iran and Russia backing the government and the United States supporting the opposition. In a separate statement, the U.S. Treasury Department said the new sanctions add two individuals, nine business entities and the Central Bank of Syria to Washington’s Specially Designated Nationals and Blocked Persons List. The U.S. State Department also designated Asma al-Assad, the British-born wife of the Syrian president, accusing her of impeding efforts for a political resolution to the war, and several members of her family, Pompeo said. Asma al-Assad was previously hit with sanctions in June. Among those blacklisted were Lina Mohammed Nazir al-Kinayeh,  one  of Assad’s key advisers;  her husband, Syrian parliamentarian Mohammed Hammam Mohammed Adnan Masouti; several government affiliated  businesses; and General Kifah Moulhem, commander of Syria’s Military Intelligence organization.Tuesday’s action freezes any U.S. assets of those blacklisted and generally bar Americans from dealing with them. Non-Americans that engage in certain transactions with the targeted people and entities may also be hit with sanctions, the Treasury said. *Reporting by Daphne Psaledakis and Lisa Lambert Editing by Chizu Nomiyama, Mark Heinrich and Richard Chang

Hey Iran: Israeli Sub Heads To Persian Gulf With Egypt OK

By ARIE EGOZI/Beaking Defence/December 23/2020
The Dolphin submarines are armed with a mix of very advanced weapons, including long-range ballistic missiles armed with nuclear warheads. TEL AVIV: An Israeli Dolphin submarine possibly carrying nuclear weapons crossed the Suez Canal last week on its way to the Persian Gulf, sources here confirmed on Dec 22. The submarine crossed the Suez Canal with Egyptian approval and sailed on the surface, a source said, “sending a clear warning to Teheran.”Last week, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Gen. Mark Milley visited Israel to coordinate joint actions against Iran should it attack Israeli targets.
The Dolphin submarines are armed with a mix of very advanced weapons, including long-range ballistic missiles armed with nuclear warheads, according to foreign press sources. Israeli intelligence point to a possible military action by Iran against the U.S and Israel as the Jan. 3 anniversary of the death of Qassem Soleimani, commander of the Iranian Quds Force, approaches. He was killed when a U.S drone launched missiles that obliterated his car near Baghdad International Airport. In a parallel development, the Israeli government instructed the IDF to prepare for an American action against Iran, according to a report by senior reporter Barak Ravid at the Israeli Walla News outlet. This report said the IDF was instructed “to prepare for a scenario of a U.S action against Iran before President Donald Trump leaves the White House on January 20.” It also says Israeli Defense Secretary Benny Gantz has spoken twice in the past two weeks with Acting Secretary of Defense Christopher Miller. Earlier this month, the New York Times reported that President Trump had discussed attacking Iran’s central uranium enrichment facility in Natanz during an Oval Office meeting. Vice President Mike Pence, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and other senior government officials convinced the president it would lead to regional escalation and the matter was dropped. A few days after the New York Times report, Pompeo visited Israel and the Gulf states. While Pompeo was in the Gulf, Central Command announced a surprise exercise in which B-52 strategic bombers were launched. A CentCom statement said “the aim of the exercise was to deter aggressive elements” and to express support for the United States’ allies in the Middle East. The B-52s are capable of carrying the giant deep penetrating bombs designed to destroy buried and protected sites such as those the Iranians have reportedly built to protect their facilities.

 

The Latest LCCC English analysis & editorials from miscellaneous sources published on December 23-24/2020

Will Biden learn from Trump and keep making America secure again
Clifford D. May/The Washington Times/December 23/2020
Trump recognized threats, and at least began to address them
“Build Back Better” was Joe Biden’s campaign slogan. How different is that, really, from “Make America Great Again”? Both BBB and MAGA suggest the need for restoration, for reversing deterioration and decline, for fixing what’s broken.
In foreign and national security policy, President Trump — following eight years of President Obama’s unwillingness to bolster the credibility of American power against America’s enemies — achieved some significant successes. He also suffered some significant failures. In other areas, he made incremental progress which his successor can advance — if he sees his task as building his own presidency rather than building back the Obama White House.
Mr. Trump came into office with limited knowledge of international relations, and the complex mechanisms by which policy is formulated and implemented. He did know a thing or two about deal-making, and he intuitively grasped the logic of “peace through strength.” On that basis, he increased defense spending — essential because massive defense cuts during the Obama years had left the U.S. military with decreasing readiness and aging weapons.
He was either smart or lucky to appoint a disciplined solider/scholar as his national security adviser. Gen. H.R. McMaster’s process of analysis and prioritization culminated in the 2017 National Security Strategy. Most significantly, the NSS shattered the rose-colored glasses through which the People’s Republic of China had been viewed since the 1970s.
The new NSS recognized that the regime ruling China views itself as an adversary of the United States, and that it has long been implementing a strategy to transform the so-called international liberal rules-based order — to make it decidedly illiberal with rules “antithetical to U.S. values and interests.”
The NSS also recognized that Mr. Obama’s vaunted “reset” with Russia failed to make Vladimir Putin America’s friend. Though Mr. Trump too often defended President Putin, his administration’s policies, bolstered by Congress, have been comparatively muscular.
The Islamic Republic of Iran, and the dynastic dictatorship that rules North Korea were characterized as “rogue regimes.”
The former, for more than four decades, has pledged “Death to America!” while covertly attempting to acquire the nuclear weapons that could bring its capabilities in line with its intentions. Under President Obama’s Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action, the regime agreed to pause — not end — some aspects of its nuclear program in exchange for billions of dollars. This attempt to buy — or rent — the goodwill of Iran’s Islamist rulers never enjoyed the support of Congress or the public and, in May 2018, Mr. Trump withdrew from the JCPOA.
He then began to impose sanctions that have crippled Iran’s economy and reduced the regime’s financial support for terrorist groups. But the “maximum pressure” campaign was never really maximum, and slightly more than two years has not been enough time to force Iran’s rulers to make serious concessions in exchange for relief. Elliott Abrams, the president’s special envoy for Iran, believes the regime may be nearing that point — if the new administration doesn’t blink.
Mr. Trump also made the bold decision to eliminate Qasem Soleimani, commander of the Quds Force, a branch of the Iranian Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, a terrorist organization responsible for killing hundreds of Americans. The ruling mullahs’ longstanding belief that, “The Americans cannot do a damn thing!” suddenly seemed questionable.
As for North Korea, Mr. Obama’s policy of “strategic patience,” a euphemism for doing nothing, achieved nothing. Mr. Trump attempted a different approach: personal diplomacy. It, too, fell flat. In retrospect, it was naive to think that Kim Jong-un would be tempted by Mr. Trump’s offers to help him lift his people from poverty. Nor, apparently, did veiled threats of military action prompt the dictator to consider ending his efforts to develop the capability to deliver nuclear warheads to American targets.
Mr. Trump took meaningful action against Sunni terrorism in Syria. A small cohort of elite American forces led Kurdish and Arab allies in a campaign that deprived the Islamic State of the territories it had conquered following President Obama’s withdrawal of all U.S. troops from Iraq in 2011.
The most historic victory of the Trump administration was the signing of the Abraham Accords, the first time in more than a generation that Arab states have opened formal diplomatic relations with Israel. The United Emirates and Bahrain were the pioneers. Sudan and Morocco are now following suit.
An end to the Palestinian-Israeli conflict can now be imagined, but it would require Palestinian leaders to define the “Palestinian cause” not as the destruction of the Jewish state, but as two states for two peoples peacefully co-existing. Hamas, which rules Gaza, will never adopt that position. Mahmoud Abbas, the 85-year-old president of the Palestinian Authority that governs the West Bank, has been, at best, ambivalent about what a two-state solution could mean.
In 2013-15, the U.S. Office of Personnel Management was hit with a hack targeting the records of more than 20 million Americans. China is believed to have been responsible. The most recent cyberattack on at least six U.S. cabinet-level departments, likely carried out by Russia, makes clear that the tens of billions spent on cyber defense by both the Obama and Trump administrations have failed to get the job done.
The primary responsibility of a U.S. president is to defend Americans from those intent on doing them harm. In the Trump administration, significant threats, ignored or downplayed by his predecessor, were at least recognized. Accommodation was not the default response.
No one expects Mr. Biden to say publicly that Mr. Trump’s policies served as a necessary corrective to Mr. Obama’s. But perhaps he and his top advisers have learned some lessons over the last 12 turbulent years. It would be premature, not to mention cynical, to rule out that possibility.
• Clifford D. May is founder and president of the Foundation for Defense of Democracies (FDD) and a columnist for The Washington Times.

To fight anti-Semitism, the UN must first define it

David May and Haley Weinischke/ Washington Examiner/December 23/2020
The United States “must deal with the insanity at the center of the Human Rights Council — persistent and egregious anti-Israel bias,” U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Kelly Craft declared last Monday. She criticized the council for targeting Israel more than any other country in the world. Craft is right about the U.N.’s anti-Israel bias, but an effective response to the problem begins with recognizing that this bias is rooted in plain anti-Semitism.
It is the kind of anti-Semitism that manifests itself in double standards. The council obsesses over Israel to the point of distraction and deems it a pariah, all the while turning a blind eye to genuinely oppressive regimes, such as those in Beijing, Tehran, or Damascus.
The International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance has recognized that such double standards constitute anti-Semitism as much as other manifestations such as Holocaust denial and symbols like the swastika. The IHRA is a joint initiative of dozens of governments, mainly European, committed to Holocaust education and combating anti-Semitism. Its definition of anti-Semitism has been adopted by more than 25 countries, the European Parliament, and even the English Premier League.
The Human Rights Council may be the U.N. body that has most often engaged in IHRA-defined anti-Semitism. The UNHRC maintains agenda item seven, which requires the council to review Israel’s human rights record at every meeting. No other country is singled out in this way. In fact, resolutions targeting Israel far outnumber those leveled against China, Iran, Syria, and North Korea combined. The UNHRC also supports a special rapporteur whose mandate is limited to investigating alleged Israeli crimes but not Palestinian ones.
In 2016, the council called for the creation of a database of all businesses conducting activities in or related to Israel’s settlements. The list is intended to intimidate companies out of operating in the West Bank, even though they are legally allowed to do so, and even though no such list exists for any other conflict zone around the world, from Russian-occupied Ukraine to the Turkish-dominated northern Cyprus.
Meanwhile, the U.N. General Assembly maintains a special committee to investigate accusations of Israeli abuses. It also has a committee and a division dedicated to advocating for Palestinians, which in practice has mainly entailed denunciations of Israel. The U.N. maintains no analogous bodies dedicated to defaming any other country.
Likewise, the U.N. holds Israel to a double standard on refugee issues through the U.N. Relief and Works Agency, a special agency dedicated to the Palestinians, whereas all other refugees are the concern of the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees. Unlike UNHCR, UNRWA insists upon a “right of return” for Palestinian refugees and their descendants rather than promoting resettlement. This approach demonstrably perpetuates tensions rather than resolving them. Furthermore, UNRWA teachers have been documented praising Hitler, denying the Holocaust, calling for the murder of Jews, and promoting anti-Semitic conspiracy theories.
Despite applying a double standard to Israel, the U.N. has begun to recognize anti-Semitism as an actual problem, especially in the context of Holocaust denial. At a U.N.-sponsored seminar on anti-Semitism in June 2004, former Secretary-General Kofi Annan recognized the U.N.’s shortcomings in fighting anti-Semitism and issued a call to action. In 2005 and 2007, the General Assembly passed resolutions condemning Holocaust denial. And in 2006, the U.N. established a Holocaust remembrance outreach program.
In another positive development, the U.N. held its first informal meeting on anti-Semitism in January 2015. Then-Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon declared, “A United Nations that wants to be true to its founding aims and ideals has a duty to speak out against anti-Semitism.” In 2017, current Secretary-General Antonio Guterres condemned calls to destroy Israel as a “form of modern anti-Semitism” and vowed that the U.N. would treat Israel fairly. For once, a U.N. leader recognized that prejudice against the Jewish state, and not just Jewish individuals, is a form of anti-Semitism.
U.N. leaders have even begun to embrace the IHRA definition as a useful tool for combating anti-Semitism. In September 2018, Guterres praised the IHRA definition. A year later, U.N. Special Rapporteur on Freedom of Religion or Belief Ahmed Shaheed encouraged countries to adopt the IHRA definition to fight anti-Semitism. Then, in November 2020, U.N. focal point to monitor anti-Semitism Miguel Moratinos said that the U.N. should work on a definition of anti-Semitism “based on the IHRA definition.”
While the efforts of these individuals are admirable, they are insufficient if the U.N. does not dismantle the institutional machinery that perpetuates anti-Semitism in the form of pervasive, obsessive anti-Israel bias. The U.N. should therefore adopt the IHRA definition and its examples and ensure that none of its bodies or officials engage in anti-Semitic behavior. This should be a prerequisite for the U.S. rejoining U.N. bodies such as the UNHRC. Otherwise, the U.S. would be lending legitimacy to this insanity.
*David May is a research analyst at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies, where Haley Weinischke is an intern. Follow David on Twitter @DavidSamuelMay. Follow FDD on Twitter @FDD. FDD is a Washington, DC-based, nonpartisan research institute focusing on national security and foreign policy.

Iran Is Not Looking for a War With America/But Biden should make it clear that the U.S. is willing to respond to anything the Iranians are planning
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Eli Lake/Bloomberg/December 23/2020
Ever since a U.S. missile killed Iran’s most important general almost a year ago, the regime has been vowing revenge, with the latest threat coming just last week. Yet aside from a barrage of missile strikes on an Iraqi base last January, causing traumatic brain injuries for U.S. soldiers stationed there, Iran’s response has been relatively muted. That’s because, even as the U.S. military prepares for anything Iran or its proxies might try, the regime is not looking for an open confrontation with the world’s most powerful military. So says General Frank McKenzie, the man in charge of the U.S. Central Command.
“It’s a very complex issue,” McKenzie said in an interview Sunday with a small group of reporters. “At one level the Iranians are not looking for a major incident with the United States, they are not looking for a war.” At the same time, he acknowledged that there is a real desire for the regime to avenge General Qassem Soleimani’s death.  That last part is understandable. Soleimani was a gifted military strategist, commanding a multi-front war and insurgency in the Middle East that at its peak included operations in Yemen, Iraq, Syria and Lebanon. His leadership abilities helped Soleimani coordinate this multi-front war and keep the disparate proxies and militias on the same page. Since Soleimani’s demise, McKenzie said, the U.S. has seen fissures within the Shiite militias Iran supported in Iraq, some of which are more open to taking orders from Iraq’s elected government instead of its more menacing neighbor. Soleimani’s death, McKenzie said, “unhinged Iran’s ability to direct these units forcefully.”
On the one hand this makes it more likely that rogue units could launch unauthorized attacks. On the other, the frequency of attacks from Iranian-supported militias against the U.S. and its allies has diminished. “In the last few months, they have been few and far between,” McKenzie said.
All of this raises a question for President-elect Joe Biden. Most of his party denounced President Donald Trump’s decision to kill Soleimani in January as a reckless provocation. Biden himself wrote in Foreign Affairs that Soleimani’s killing “removed a dangerous actor but also raised the prospect of an ever-escalating cycle of violence in the region.” Will Biden attempt to de-escalate that cycle with Iran — and will that work?
McKenzie’s perspective is instructive. Iran’s leaders have never doubted America’s “capability to respond” to their attacks, he said. Instead, the regime has doubted “our will to respond.” The Soleimani attack demonstrated a willingness “they did not think we would be able to have,” he said.
The events leading to Soleimani’s demise demonstrate the point. Iran began to escalate its attacks on U.S. allies in the region in the spring of 2019. Its revolutionary guard corps attacked oil tankers. A fleet of drones attacked a Saudi refinery. In the weeks leading up to the strike against Soleimani, Iranian-backed militias overran the U.S. embassy in Baghdad. All the while, Trump avoided striking Iranian targets inside Iran, fearing it would lead to a new war in the Middle East. When Trump finally did escalate last January, the result was not a new war. The regime did fire on an Iraqi base and mistakenly shot down a Ukrainian passenger jet. But eventually the pace of its attacks on U.S. forces and allies in the region diminished. Deterrence was re-established.
That’s a valuable lesson for Biden as he prepares to take office. Iran’s supreme leader is now threatening revenge during a chaotic presidential transition. Biden should make it clear that the U.S. has both the capability and willingness to respond to anything the Iranians are planning.

Drug Trafficking: The Dirtiest Little Secret
Chris Farrell/Gatestone Institute/December 23/2020
In a border community like El Paso, the Mexican cartels have an insidious, silent and powerful control that few people wish to acknowledge or accept -- that includes a largely compliant news media who usually report what happens, but rarely, if ever, ask "Why?" or "How can this go on, decade after decade, without accountability or resolution?"
If a population is dying from overdoses that is one-third as large as the COVID pandemic -- and we don't see, don't hear about it, and apparently don't really care about it, what does that say about us?
Tens of thousands of law enforcement officers, billions of taxpayer dollars, fifty years -- and the highest overdose rate in history? It is terribly unpopular to blame law enforcement, especially when they are being unfairly attacked by the militant fringe elements like Antifa and various lunatic municipal officials seeking to defund them -- but cleaning house within various agencies and increasing police pay would go a long way towards thwarting our greatest domestic threat.
A year ago, President Donald J. Trump declared he would name Mexican Cartels as foreign terrorist organizations. He paused his decision, and then tabled it, based on assurances from Mexican President Andrés Manuel López Obrador and a reported wave of resistance from his own cabinet. The incoming Biden administration has the cartels virtually "high-fiving" each other -- they know a Biden administration will do nothing to stop cartel dominance and control of the US-Mexico border.
Here is the answer: Law enforcement corruption. The question? Why are we continuing to fight and lose the "War on Drugs," proclaimed by President Nixon, almost fifty years ago, in June 1971?
Think about the U.S. forces arrayed against Mexican drug cartels: DEA, FBI, Homeland Security, state police forces, county sheriffs, municipal police forces, even the postal service. We have established High Intensity Drug Trafficking Area task forces with their own regional fusion centers.
The United States is incapable of defeating Mexican cartels? We can transport armored and special operations forces halfway around the world to the Middle East and Southwest Asia, and defeat both conventional and irregular military forces -- but we cannot secure our southern border and stop the poisoning of our own population?
How can this be? Are we not smart enough? ... Not strong enough? ... Not enough money, or resources, or people? ... Not enough technology? Are you prepared to believe any of those excuses?
According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, "Over 81,000 drug overdose deaths occurred in the United States in the 12 months ending in May 2020, the highest number of overdose deaths ever recorded in a 12-month period..." That is equal to one-third of the total number of deaths supposedly attributed to the COVID pandemic.
Deaths equal to one-third of the pandemic? From another cause? Where is the wall-to-wall news reporting on that public health crisis? Why aren't people marching in the streets demanding action and justice for that threat to human life? Since Joe Biden was elected president, we have not heard a peep from Antifa and BLM -- maybe they can take up the drug overdose cause?
In October, federal law enforcement officials arrested Mexican General Salvador Cienfuegos as he arrived in Los Angeles for a family vacation. Cienfuegos was accused of taking bribes and protecting cartel leaders when he served as defense minister from 2012 to 2018. A month later, the U.S. dropped charges and returned Cienfuegos to Mexico. "Foreign policy considerations" was the official lie covering for the reversal of what might have been an incremental step forward towards legitimate justice in America's decades-long, losing "War on Drugs." Every thinking person who has contemplated the drug corruption crisis confronting America knows that absolutely nothing will happen to Cienfuegos now that he is back in Mexico. He gets off Scot-free, other than having to vacation in places other than the United States.
The Wall Street Journal, reporting on the Cienfuegos debacle, noted:
"Gen. Cienfuegos's return puts an uncomfortable spotlight on Mexico's judicial system. More than nine in 10 crimes are never reported or punished, according to the country's statistics agency."
Let us look more deeply at the drug crisis we face at the level of families and communities. We can get lost looking at national overdose numbers and corrupt foreign generals. Dirty cops are killing Americans, directly and indirectly. In a border community like El Paso, the Mexican cartels have an insidious, silent and powerful control that few people wish to acknowledge or accept -- that includes a largely compliant news media who usually report what happens, but rarely, if ever, ask "Why?" or "How can this go on, decade after decade, without accountability or resolution?"
More than seven years of ongoing investigation by Judicial Watch in that region has revealed law enforcement corruption that ranges on a scale from merely turning a blind eye; to marked law enforcement vehicles being used to move burlap bales of marijuana; all the way up to senior officials communicating with and tipping-off cartel members about planned operations. That is what some of the supposedly "good guys" are doing.
This is a dark, dangerous and threatening side of life in American communities across the country. The drugs do not just materialize out of thin air in Dayton, OH, or Rockville Centre, NY, or Whitefish, MT. If a population is dying from overdoses that is one-third as large as the COVID pandemic -- and we don't see, don't hear about it, and apparently don't really care about it -- what does that say about us?
Tens of thousands of law enforcement officers, billions of taxpayer dollars, nearly fifty years -- and the highest overdose rate in history? It is terribly unpopular to blame law enforcement, especially when they are being unfairly attacked by the militant fringe elements like Antifa and various lunatic municipal officials seeking to defund them -- but cleaning house within various agencies and increasing police pay would go a long way towards thwarting our greatest domestic threat.
A year ago, President Donald J. Trump declared he would name Mexican Cartels as foreign terrorist organizations. He paused his decision, and then tabled it, based on assurances from Mexican President Andrés Manuel López Obrador and a reported wave of resistance from his own cabinet.
The incoming Biden administration has the cartels virtually "high-fiving" each other -- they know a Biden administration will do nothing to stop cartel dominance and control of the US-Mexico border. What law enforcement officer is going to put his life on the line for a Biden administration policy? None. Unless there is an unforeseen and dramatic positive change in law enforcement at the federal, state and municipal levels, expect more of our dirtiest little secret for years to come and a continuation of the United States' longest war.
**Chris Farrell is a former counterintelligence case officer. For the past 20 years, he has served as the Director of Investigations & Research for Judicial Watch. The views expressed are the author's alone, and not necessarily those of Judicial Watch.
*© 2020 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.

It’s easy to criticize Abbas for Palestinian failures but the true blame lies with the extremists
Ray Hanania/Arab News/December 23/2020
Since the death of Yasser Arafat and the collapse of the peace process, many Palestinian activists and groups have blamed his successor, Mahmoud Abbas, for Palestinian failures.
Abbas is the “president” of Palestine, a title that symbolized something during the former peace process but now, under the brutal Israeli occupation, is essentially an empty title.
Yet Abbas has done as much as he could in the face of mounting criticism from Palestinian extremists and those who have spent their lives opposing any peace deal with Israel based on compromise. These extremist critics of Abbas have never really supported the peace process or a compromise agreement. They aggressively opposed the 1993 Oslo Peace Accords and yet, ironically, in the same breath were quick to denounce Israel for rejecting peace based on compromise.
If anyone is to blame for the suffering of the Palestinians, besides Israel, it is not Abbas — who has struggled to rally support among European nations in an attempt to put pressure on the Israelis in the pursuit of peace — it is extremists such as Hamas and others groups, including the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, and Islamic Jihad.If Palestinian extremists have one thing in common with the Israeli authorities, it is their opposition to a peace based on compromise. They both want it all.
But it is easier for the Palestinians to focus their criticism on Abbas; he is now in his 80s and has been weakened by the deterioration of the Oslo agreements, driven by opposition from Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and his predecessors, including the terrorist Ariel Sharon.
The Palestinian extremists know that they have a better chance of succeeding in undermining Abbas, thus achieving a Pyrrhic victory fighting against fellow Palestinians who support peace, than in standing up to the Israelis who oppose peace. These extremists rely on the battered emotions of the Palestinian people who live in Israel, Gaza, under occupation in the West Bank, and in the diaspora, where the extremism is even greater.
The worse the situation becomes for the Palestinians, the greater the emotional suffering — and the greater the emotional suffering, the stronger the extremists become. They do not have to actually achieve anything; all they have to do is speak out in opposition to any form of peace based on compromise and denounce those who support the two-state solution as “sell-outs,” “Uncle Toms” or “quislings.”
This kind of name-calling directed against their own kind is the most potent weapon the extremists have in their arsenal of hate. They are ineffective at everything else. Their many acts of violence — from suicide bombings intended to derail the peace process in the 1990s to the killings of Israeli civilians in various attacks — have never come close to achieving freedom. However it reinforces the anger, which reinforces the opposition to compromise with Israel.
Abbas has protested against the peace gestures initiated by the Trump administration, including the Peace to Prosperity economic plans unveiled in Bahrain in June 2019 and the “Deal of the Century” presented at the White House in January this year. If Abbas has a fault, it was to surrender to the extremists by refusing to participate in discussions about these with Washington.
The Palestinian extremists know that they have a better chance of succeeding in undermining Abbas, thus achieving a Pyrrhic victory fighting against fellow Palestinians who support peace, than in standing up to the Israelis who oppose peace.
During Trump’s time in office it has been easy for the extremists to align themselves with Abbas, who rejected the US president’s deals as one-sided strategies designed to strengthen Israel at the expense of the Palestinians.
Trump’s embarrassing defeat by Joe Biden in the presidential election last month has given Abbas an opportunity to distance himself from the extremists, who do not really care whether it is Trump or Biden who proposes a peace deal based on compromise. No form of compromise is acceptable to them.
We have now seen an attempt by Abbas to re-engage with the Israelis and restore the Oslo-based relations of an occupation-government existence, which is the only type of government that Israel allows and the only type the Palestinians can ever hope to have. He has called on Israel to return to the negotiating table for renewed peace talks now that the biased Trump administration is on its way out.
Although Abbas spoke out against the agreements by the UAE, Bahrain, Sudan and Morocco to normalize relations with Israel, he did not argue against peace. His criticism of the so-called “Abraham Accords” and the subsequent agreements is not based on opposition to the premise of achieving peace with Israel, but opposition to the premise of achieving peace with Israel without including Palestine.
Fortunately, Saudi Arabia remains one of the strongest voices in opposition to any peace agreement that does not also include the Israelis signing a peace accord with the Palestinians.
This week, Egypt and Jordan worked together in an effort to convince the Israelis and Palestinians to return to the negotiating table, and their leaders have discussed hosting a peace conference in 2021.
The challenge Abbas faces is to stand firm against the criticisms from extremists that fan the flames of anger and violence among the Palestinians, which in the end always scuppers peace talks. While Hamas waffles, claiming to support peace, they have done everything they can to thwart peace efforts and have proven to be unreliable partners.
Abbas must stand firm and crack down on Hamas to build a renewed Palestinian peace movement that can rival the limited peace accords Israel achieved under Trump.
If there is to be an alternative to the leadership of Abbas, it must not come from among the extremists but from moderates such as Hanan Ashrawi, who resigned from the Palestine Liberation Organization after she called for “reforms” and a resumption of elections to rebuild the weakened political organization.
Short of that, Abbas remains the only real hope for Palestinian aspirations — and extremists such as Hamas remain the greatest obstacle to peace and Palestinian independence.
*Ray Hanania is an award-winning former Chicago City Hall political reporter and columnist. He can be reached on his personal website at www.Hanania.com. Twitter: @RayHanania

Why the Qatar blockade should remain in place
Mohamed Alodadi/Al Arabiya/December 23/2020
Since Egypt, Saudi Arabia, the UAE and Bahrain severed diplomatic relations with the Qatar and imposed an air, land, and sea embargo, the country has not altered its behavior. With talks of normalization with Qatar on the horizon, the blockading states should acknowledge that none of their demands have been met. Qatar has been playing the victim as it lobbies the US and the European Union to pressure the boycotting countries to re-establish diplomatic relations and lift the embargo. Unfortunately, some American and European politicians and diplomats seem to believe the Qatari narrative of victimhood and its argument that the boycotting countries are trying to interfere in the internal affairs of Qatar, infringe its sovereignty, and stifle the freedom of the press there.
Most often, Qatar cites the boycotting countries’ demands as interference in its internal affairs. When the blockade was launched, the Arab Quartet gave a list of 13 demands. Among them was that Doha shut down Al Jazeera, sever all ties with terrorist organizations – including the Muslim Brotherhood, ISIS, al-Qaeda and Iran-backed Hezbollah – scale back cooperation with Iran, hand over terrorist figures harbored in Qatar, and stop granting citizenship to wanted nationals from the blockading quartet.
Over the years, Qatar has actively tried to undermine the blockading countries, and unless Qatar drastically changes its behavior by ceasing support for extremist groups, such as the Muslim Brotherhood, the blockade should remain in place.
One of the principle complaints the blockade had of Qatar was its use of Al Jazeera, that some countries, including Iraq, argue airs news programs that incite hatred, violence and acts of terrorism with its bellicose Arabic language rhetoric.
I distinctly remember how Al Jazeera programming in the late 1990s and early 2000s was exclusively directed against the presence of American troops in Saudi Arabia, and how violence and terrorism against Americans and Europeans living and working in Saudi Arabia was instigated by Al Jazeera and by Saudi Arabian and non-Saudi Arabian clerics whose views were aired on Al Jazeera. Both Al Jazeera and the clerics cited a saying ascribed to Prophet Mohammed to expel Jews and Christians from the Arabian Peninsula.
When the American forces relocated to Al-Udaid airbase in Qatar in 2002, the calls for “expelling the Jews and the Christians from the Arabian Peninsula” disappeared from the rhetoric of both Al Jazeera and the clerics.
I remember, also, how Al Jazeera became the mouthpiece of Al Qaeda and of Osama bin Laden during the US invasion of Afghanistan following the 9/11 terrorist attacks on the twin towers in New York City.
We should not forget that in 2004 the US complained about Al Jazeera’s coverage of the war on terror in Afghanistan. Three years prior, Al Jazeera’s Kabul office was bombed by a US missile. The US government has never acknowledged the bombing, but a memo leaked in 2004 gave impetus to the belief that the strike was intentional.
Some saw Al Jazeera’s lopsided reporting as being partly responsible for the violence against Americans in Saudi Arabia, and further placed blame on Qatar for inciting violence in Eastern Saudi Arabia and in Bahrain following the Arab Spring uprisings. In 2015, a Qatar-based cleric called for protests in Egypt against President Hosni Mubarak, saying that Mohamed Morsi, the previously elected president who belonged to the Muslim Brotherhood, was the legitimate leader.
More recently, recordings of senior Qatari officials have surfaced in which the former Emir of Qatar, Sheikh Hamad bin Khaliah, the father of the current Emir, conspired with Libya’s late dictator Muammar Al-Gaddafi to assassinate the King of Saudi Arabia, King Abdullah bin Abdulaziz.
Qatar has referred to itself as “Ka’abat Almadhyoom” which, loosely translated, means “sanctuary for the oppressed.” But for close to a quarter of a century, Qatar has been staging a clandestine war against its Arab Gulf neighbors and has offered refuge to extremists, sheltering them in Doha.
The Arab Gulf state has not altered its behavior since 2017, and until Doha is ready to make some serious adjustments, stop harboring international fugitives, and work to become a regional partner, the blockade should remain in place.