LCCC ENGLISH DAILY NEWS BULLETIN
May 08/2019
Compiled & Prepared by: Elias Bejjani

The Bulletin's Link on the lccc Site
http://data.eliasbejjaninews.com/eliasnews19/english.may08.19.htm

News Bulletin Achieves Since 2006
Click Here to enter the LCCC Arabic/English news bulletins Achieves since 2006

Bible Quotations For today
God did not give us a spirit of cowardice, but rather a spirit of power and of love and of self-discipline
Second Letter to Timothy 01/06-14: “For this reason I remind you to rekindle the gift of God that is within you through the laying on of my hands; for God did not give us a spirit of cowardice, but rather a spirit of power and of love and of self-discipline. Do not be ashamed, then, of the testimony about our Lord or of me his prisoner, but join with me in suffering for the gospel, relying on the power of God, who saved us and called us with a holy calling, not according to our works but according to his own purpose and grace. This grace was given to us in Christ Jesus before the ages began, but it has now been revealed through the appearing of our Saviour Christ Jesus, who abolished death and brought life and immortality to light through the gospel. For this gospel I was appointed a herald and an apostle and a teacher, and for this reason I suffer as I do. But I am not ashamed, for I know the one in whom I have put my trust, and I am sure that he is able to guard until that day what I have entrusted to him. Hold to the standard of sound teaching that you have heard from me, in the faith and love that are in Christ Jesus. Guard the good treasure entrusted to you, with the help of the Holy Spirit living in us.”.

Titles For The Latest English LCCC Lebanese & Lebanese Related News published on May 07-08/19
May 07th/2008 Hezbollah’s Bloody Invasion Of Beirut & Mount Lebanon
Angry Metn Residents Fight Back Against Forcible Power Lines Installation
Mansourieh Residents Scuffle with Police over Installation of High-Voltage Lines
Hankache, Sayegh Brief Maronite Patriarch on Mansourieh Standoff
Lebanese Govt. to Ask BDL, Armed Forces for Numbers before Taking Budget Decisions
Aoun Says Lower and Middle Class Incomes Won't be Touched
Beirut Stock Exchange Announces Resumption of Trading
Central Bank Employees Suspend Strike for Three Days
Hariri: All Sectors, Including Banks, Will Contribute to Budget
Mustaqbal Slams 'Suspicious Campaign' against Salameh, Banks
UK Foreign Office Official Meets Top Lebanese Officials
Jumblat Urges Pacification as Abu Faraj's Family Drops Lawsuit
Ogero Employees Pledge to Continue Strike
Shamsi Says UAE Plans to Lift Travel Ban to Lebanon
The Hezbollah Sleeper Agent Busted for Black Ops in America

Titles For The Latest English LCCC Miscellaneous Reports And News published on May 07-08/19
Europe 'will reimpose sanctions' if Iran fails nuclear deal commitments
Iran to Restart Some Nuclear Activity in Response to U.S. Withdrawal from Nuclear Deal
Escalation in Syria's Idlib Rattles Months-old Truce
More than 150,000 displaced in northwest Syria in one week: UN
Anger in Istanbul as protesters reject re-run of election for city’s mayor
Six ministers face sack in Iraq Cabinet shake-up
IMF Chief Says US-China Tensions 'Threat' to World Economy

Litles For The Latest LCCC English analysis & editorials from miscellaneous sources published on May 07-08/19
May 07th/2008 Hezbollah’s Bloody Invasion Of Beirut & Mount Lebanon/Elias Bejjani/May 07/2019
The Hezbollah Sleeper Agent Busted for Black Ops in America/Michael Daly/The Daily Beast/May 07/2019
Escalation in Syria's Idlib Rattles Months-old Truce/AFP/May 07/2019
Welcome to the Post-Middle East ISIS/Hassan Hassan/ Foreign Policy/May 07/2019
Kushner's Middle East Mission Impossible/Aaron David Miller/The Hill/May 07/2019
Support for Israel in the US starting to shift/Yossi Mekelberg/Arab News/May 08/2019
Can Trump get Iranian leaders to the negotiating table/Camelia Entekhabifard/Arab News/May 08/2019

The Latest English LCCC Lebanese & Lebanese Related News published on May 07-08/19
May 07th/2008 Hezbollah’s Bloody Invasion Of Beirut & Mount Lebanon
Elias Bejjani/May 07/2019
http://eliasbejjaninews.com/archives/74558/elias-bejjani-may-07th-2008-hezbollahs-bloody-invasion-of-beirut-mount-lebanon/

On May 07th, 2008 Hezbollah Armed Terrorist Iranian militia proxy invaded the Lebanese capital, Beirut, and some regions in Mount Lebanon at the backdrop of a government resolution regarding the its illegal telecommunication network The Terrorist Hezbollah, backed by its pro Syrian and pro Iranian March 08 armed terrorists, broke in some Lebanese deputies’ houses, assassinated innocent citizens on the streets, burned and looted some media institutions belonging to Future Movement, and stopped by force the Future TV News Channel from broadcasting after spreading its armed men inside its studios.
Dozens of innocent civilians were killed and injured on the streets and in their houses in this criminal invasion. The Invasion also targeted some areas of mount Lebanon few days after that of Beirut. Hassan Nasrallah, the Hezbollah appointed Iranian leader shamelessly called the invasion a day of glory. Sadly the Lebanese army watched the Hezbollah criminal invasion without taking any deterrent procedure while totally abandoned its obligations and national duties. The Army’s Chief at the time of the invasion, Michael Suleiman was rewarded for his pro Hezbollah role and afterwards by the help and full support of Iran, Syria and Hezbollah was elected illegally as Lebanon’s president. It remains that Hezbollah is not Lebanese by any means, or under any constitutional or patriotic criteria. Hezbollah is a mere Iranian Occupation tool. This Shiite Iranian armed Militia is an Iranian Army and has been occupying Lebanon since 2005 after the Syrian Army was forced to withdraw as a result of a huge public demonstration known as the 14th Of March Demo and Revolution. While remembering the bloody and criminal invasion, the Lebanese in both Lebanon and Diaspora, citizens, officials and politicians are all ought to never ever succumb to Hezbollah’s occupation and at the same time are urgently required to call for the implementation of the two UN resolutions 1559 and 1701. On this day, our prayers go to the souls of the innocent Lebanese victims that were killed by Hezbollah on the May, 2008 invasion in both Beirut and Mount Lebanon.

Angry Metn Residents Fight Back Against Forcible Power Lines Installation
Kataeb.org/Tuesday 07th May 2019/The Energy Ministry on Tuesday dispatched workers to start the forcible installation of high-voltage power lines in Mansourieh, with Electricite du Liban workers being protected by security forces to prevent residents from hindering the works. The angry residents, who have spared no effort to stop the hazardous power lines from being installed over the area's houses and schools, scuffled with the police that used force to suppress the protesters, some of whom were seen live on TV being hit on the head with batons. Works were later stopped after the residents put pressure by blocking a main road in the area. It is worth noting that installation was taking place in a private land whose owner objected to the brazen encroachment. "I've spent two hours telling them to get off my land, but no one was listening to me," the owner told MTV. Protests have been staged in the area since 2011 to denounce plans for high-voltage power lines which, according to subsequent energy ministers, are needed to tackle the country’s electricity crisis as the project aims to connect a power plant in Mkalles to one in Bsalim. A delegation from the Metn area had met with Energy Minister Nada Boustani to explain to her the residents' concerns and demand that the power lines would be installed underground instead. However, the minister refused to pay heed to the residents' fears, deciding to go on with the plan despite objections. Kataeb lawmaker Elias Hankache called on both President Michel Aoun and Maronite Patriarch Bechara al-Rahi to intervene to resolve this problem, affirming that the residents will not allow power lines to be installed above the ground. Hankache is set to meet with the Maronite patriarch later on Tuesday, Voice of Lebanon radio station reported. “Force must be used against drug dealers and the corrupt, not against unarmed citizens,” Hankache told MTV channel as he was shoring up the residents' action against the forcible installation works. For his part, Kataeb politburo member and Former Economy Minister Alain Hakim posted a video showing the scuffle between Mansourieh residents and security forces. “What is happening is unacceptable, and the state’s forcible installation of high-voltage power lines in Mansourieh reminds us of the same practices that used to take place during the Syrian occupation in Lebanon,” Hakim said in a tweet.

Mansourieh Residents Scuffle with Police over Installation of High-Voltage Lines
Naharnet/May 07/2019/A scuffle erupted between workers from Electricte du Liban, the security forces and residents of the North Metn town of Mansourieh area against the backdrop of installation of high-voltage electricity lines. The residents of the area prevented EDL workers from installing the power lines. The security forces intervened which led to a scuffle. The residents argue that the controversial project to connect a power plant in Mkalles to another in Bsalim to supply more power to the region is dangerous on public health and call for the installation of the lines underground. The Ministry of Energy argues that the electricity lines have no health risks on the residents. MP Elias Hankash “regretted the use of force against the people,” and voiced calls on President Michel Aoun and Patriarch Beshara al-Rahi to “intervene.”

Hankache, Sayegh Brief Maronite Patriarch on Mansourieh Standoff
Kataeb.org/Tuesday 07th May 2019/Maronite Patriarch Bechara al-Rahi on Tuesday denounced the excessive use of force on Mansourieh residents and Kataeb lawmaker Elias Hankache while they were protesting the forcible installation of high-voltage power lines in the area. Al-Rahi met with Hankache and Kataeb's Deputy-President Salim Sayegh who both briefed him on what happened earlier during the day in Mansourieh where security forces attacked the residents who were trying to prevent EDL workers from installing the hazardous power lines near their homes. Speaking following the meeting, Sayegh said the attack on Hankache encroaches on the Parliament's prestige given that the lawmaker represents the entire nation and all the Lebanese. Sayegh slammed the excessive use of power against Mansourieh residents as shameful, adding that the ruling authority seems to have lost the basic standards of good behavior and performance. “Everyone must understand that the project does not affect is a couple of apartments only, but 44,000 households. There is a health and environmental massacre that is being perpetrated by the authority in this area,” Sayegh blasted.
Sayegh urged Interior Minister Raya Al-Hassan, who is keen on safeguarding human rights, not to cover up such acts and decisions.

Lebanese Govt. to Ask BDL, Armed Forces for Numbers before Taking Budget Decisions
Naharnet/May 07/2019/The Cabinet continued its discussion of the 2019 draft state budget on Tuesday, announcing that it intends to ask Bank du Liban and the armed forces for "financial data and numbers." "We hope to finalize the issue of the budget on Friday or before Friday," Information Minister Jamal al-Jarrah said after the session. "Things are very good and the ongoing discussion is responsible and based on numbers," he added. "There are some financial data and numbers that we will ask from BDL and the armed forces so that they be studied and analyzed tomorrow in order to take decisions," Jarrah explained.

Aoun Says Lower and Middle Class Incomes Won't be Touched
Naharnet/May 07/2019/President Michel Aoun warned Tuesday over the economic harm caused by labor strikes, as he reassured that the incomes of lower and middle class citizens will not be touched. Meeting with a delegation from the General Confederation of Lebanese Workers and other syndicates, Aoun urged them to "evaluate the pressing situation and refrain from subjecting the country to further damage and threats." He also promised to study the concerns they raised during the meeting, reassuring that he "will not accept any measure that targets the incomes of the poor and middle classes."

Beirut Stock Exchange Announces Resumption of Trading
Kataeb.org/Tuesday 07th May 2019/Beirut Stock Exchange announced that it will resume its work starting Wednesday morning, one day after it had suspended trading due to the strike staged by the Central Bank employees. The bourse had to shut down after the Central Bank strike had made it unable to carry out the clearance and settlement process of transactions on time. A few hours after the Syndicate of Central Bank Employees decided on Tuesday to lift their strike for three days, the Beirut Stock Exchange posted a circular on its website announcing the resumption of trading in its market.

Central Bank Employees Suspend Strike for Three Days
Kataeb.org/Tuesday 07th May 2019/The Syndicate of Central Bank Employees on Tuesday decided to suspend its strike for three days, pending what will happen concerning the government's planned measures to cut the salaries and benefits of public servants as part of its 2019 budget. Following a meeting of their general assembly, the Central Bank employees announced that their strike will be lifted until Friday, when another meeting will be held to decide on the next step to make. Abbas Awada, head of the syndicate, had told Reuters that there were positive developments in contacts with officials, and said central bank employees wanted to show good will and to "relieve the market".

Hariri: All Sectors, Including Banks, Will Contribute to Budget
Kataeb.org/Tuesday 07th May 2019/Prime Minister Saad Hariri on Monday said that Lebanon is not on the brink of bankruptcy as it is being claimed, warning, however, that the failure to approve a realistic budget that reduces the state deficit would be similar to a "suicide operation" against the economy. Speaking following a meeting with President Michel Aoun and Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri at the Baabda Palace, Hariri criticized strikes being staged by public servants, assuring that most of what is being spread about the budget content is wrong. "Things are not solved through strikes, and dialogue is not forced through pressure." "We won't harm people with a limited income and you will find out that 70 percent of what is being said in the street does not exist in the budget," Hariri stated, hoping that the government will pass the budget at the end of this week. "All sectors will contribute to the budget, including the banking sector," he added.

Mustaqbal Slams 'Suspicious Campaign' against Salameh, Banks
Naharnet/May 07/2019/Al-Mustaqbal parliamentary bloc on Tuesday slammed what it called a "suspicious campaign" against Central Bank Governor Riad Salameh and the banking sector. In a statement issued after its weekly meeting, the bloc said the perceived campaign is "distorting facts and inciting the public opinion against monetary and banking policies, while using a populist approach in addressing economic and social issues."The bloc also warned that incitement to "street protests, blocking roads and paralyzing institutions will not address the real sources of the current problems."

UK Foreign Office Official Meets Top Lebanese Officials
Naharnet/May 07/2019/Director General for Political Affairs at the British Foreign & Commonwealth Office Richard Moore visited Lebanon Tuesday and met with senior Lebanese politicians and officials. This is his first visit to Lebanon since assuming his role in April 2018. Moore, accompanied by British Ambassador to Lebanon Chris Rampling, held meetings with Foreign Minister Jebran Bassil, Speaker Nabih Berri, Director General of General Security Abbas Ibrahim, Director Generals at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs Ghadi Khoury and Hadi Hashem, and senior advisors to Prime Minister Saad Hariri. The discussions focused on local and regional issues pertaining to security and stability, according to a statement issued by the British embassy. The Political Director focuses on the UK’s key foreign policy objectives and has several areas of responsibility and regions including the Middle East and North Africa. After the visit, Ambassador Rampling said: "We are pleased to welcome to Lebanon Richard Moore, one of the UK Foreign Ministry’s most senior officials. Richard is deeply familiar with the region, and the conversations were constructive and forward-looking."

Jumblat Urges Pacification as Abu Faraj's Family Drops Lawsuit

Naharnet/May 07/2019/"All we want in Choueifat is for justice to be fulfilled," Progressive Socialist Party leader ex-MP Walid Jumblat said on Tuesday, as the family of a slain PSP member dropped its lawsuit in the case as part of an initiative sponsored by President Michel Aoun. A letter dropping the lawsuit was handed to Aoun Tuesday by the ministers Akram Shehayyeb and Wael Abu Faour. "The letter will be delivered to the relevant judicial authorities upon the handover of the suspect Amin al-Souqi, so that the judiciary rules without any interferences or pressures and with guarantees from the President," Shehayyeb said. Jumblat meawhile tweeted that he shoulders full responsibility for the step, urging supporters to "shun tensions." "This is not the first time that this method has been followed, according to the law and the social norms," Jumblat said. "I thank President Aoun and the clerics for their efforts and help," he added. Abu Faraj was killed in a clash with supporters of the Lebanese Democratic Party that followed the 2018 elections. Al-Souqi, an LDP supporter, is believed to have fled to Syria.

Ogero Employees Pledge to Continue Strike

Naharnet/May 07/2019/Employees of the state-run telecommunications company Ogero announced in a press conference on Tuesday the continuation of their strike over austere budget measures proposed in the state budget. "We raise the voice high. State failures keep accumulating and burdening citizens after the disruption of a number of service sectors," protesters said. For his part, head of the General Labor Confederation, Beshara el-Asmar, hailed the General Assembly's decision to continue the strike. Asmar praised President Michel Aoun and Speaker Nabih Berri's “responsiveness”; however, he asked Prime Minister Saad Hariri to be “more responsive to the strikes.”

Shamsi Says UAE Plans to Lift Travel Ban to Lebanon
Naharnet/May 07/2019/UAE Ambassador to Lebanon Hamad al-Shamsi on Tuesday confirmed that his country will soon be lifting restrictions on travel of Emirati citizens to Lebanon. He said a team from the UAE Civil Aviation Department is meeting with its Lebanese counterparts in the Directorate of Civil Aviation and studying technical matters. Shamsi affirmed “good relations with Lebanon,” noting “the UAE’s keenness on its stability.”His remarks came after holding talks with Foreign Minister Jebran Bassil at the foreign ministry premises. “Contacts are undergoing at the highest levels and we are keen on Lebanon’s stability and support it in that direction.”

The Hezbollah Sleeper Agent Busted for Black Ops in America
Michael Daly/The Daily Beast/May 07/2019
Naomi Rodriguez is an emergency medical technician who works 12-hour shifts in the streets of The Bronx, so she immediately recognized the irony when the unremarkable-looking man who lived one floor above her was alleged to be a terrorist sleeper agent.
“I save lives, and here’s this one trying to take them,” she remarked this week from the doorway of her apartment on West 238th Street in the borough’s Kingsbridge Heights section.
Neither Ali Kourani’s attire nor demeanor gave any hint of his religion or ideology.
“How do you say, it’s just unexpected,” Rodriguez added. “Very unexpected.”
She recalled that at the time of his arrest last June, the news called 34-year-old Kourani “the Kingsbridge Heights Terrorist.” But he was not just another lone wolf inspired to Islamic radicalism by internet hate sites and following online instructions to build a bomb in the kitchen of his mom.
As will become clear when he goes on trial Monday, this seemingly unremarkable man whom Rodriguez saw in the stairway is alleged to have been a longtime undercover operative for an international terrorist organization. Kourani had allegedly been recruited as part of a plan to exact revenge for the car-bomb killing of a terror mastermind whom a former CIA agent called “probably the most intelligent, most capable operative we’ve ever run across, including the KGB or anybody else.” Kourani was, by his own multiple admissions, trained in explosives and small arms, along with secure communications, survival and interrogation as a member of Hezbollah’s External Security Organization (ESO), also known as the Islamic Jihad Organization (IJO). Or simply 910.
“Or Hezbollah black ops,” the FBI adds in court papers.
Kourani was born in Lebanon in June 1984 to a family he claims has connections with Hezbollah. He has told the FBI that his clan were “the bin Ladens of Lebanon.” He was 16 when his familial social stature enabled him to attend a 45-day terror boot camp.
“During the training, Kourani was taught to fire AK-47 assault rifles and rocket launchers, as well as basic military tactics, by Hezbollah personnel wearing uniforms,” a subsequent criminal complaint says. In 2003, at the age of 19, he emigrated to the U.S.. He lived in a two-family house in Queens, and studied biomedical engineering at the City University of New York. The course of his life was to change when Imad Mughniyah—second in command of Hezbollah and founding head of its military, intelligence and security wing—was killed in Damascus in 2008.
Mughniyah was behind the 1983 truck bombing of the U.S. Embassy in Beirut that killed seven CIA operatives along with 10 other Americans, as well as the truck bombing of the Marine barracks there later that year that killed 240. His full list of killings includes the 1985 torture and murder of Beirut CIA station chief William Buckley, the torture and killing of an American sailor aboard a hijacked airliner later that year, and the 1996 Khobar Towers bombing in Saudi Arabia that killed 19 U.S. Air Force personnel.
Add to that the killing of several hundred Israelis. Not surprisingly, Hezbollah blamed the U.S.and Israel for the killing of its mastermind and vowed revenge. Kourani would tell the FBI that Hezbollah sought to do so by copying an Israeli tactic that had long been used by the Russians, and was later portrayed in the TV series The Americans. “Kourani stated that the ESO wanted to copy the Israeli Mossad and sought to recruit ‘sleepers,’” an FBI report says. “These sleepers were tasked to maintain ostensibly normal lives the world over… [and] could be tasked with operational activity should the ESO decide to take action.”
Kourani was in Lebanon visiting his family when a cleric in his home village recruited him for the new effort, likely because of his education and the fact that he was already rooted in the U.S.. He was a perfect candidate for a “sleeper,” a seemingly ordinary person leading a normal life who could be activated to carry out terrorist acts when called.
The new recruit was instructed to don a helmet with a blacked-out visor. He was driven to meet the man who would allegedly be his handler.
“Whom Kourani knew as ‘Fadi,’” the criminal complaint says. “Fadi typically wore a mask during their meetings.”
The complaint details one of Fadi’s first instructions: “Obtain United States citizenship and a U.S. passport as soon as possible.”
Kourani fulfilled the first part of that mission in April of 2009. He applied for a passport the following week, and for a visa to China a week later. He is said to have flown in to Guangzhou, the location of a company that manufactures purported first aid ice packs that contain ammonium nitrate, an active ingredient in explosives. A large number of these “ice packs” would subsequently be found in Hezbollah bomb factories in Thailand and Cyprus. Guangzhou is also a major center for counterfeit clothing, which has been described as a major source of income for Hezbollah.
That same month, Kourani received his bachelor’s degree back in New York. He went on to receive an MBA from Keller Graduate School, making his cover all the more convincing.
In 2011, Fadi summoned Kourani to Lebanon for military training. He returned to the U.S. and allegedly followed Fadi’s instructions to identify possible sources of weapons and to research how to open businesses in New York that Hezbollah could use.
“As cover for the storage of firearms intended for ESO assassinations and attacks in the U.S.,” the FBI report explains.
Kourani was further asked to scout out the security around the Israeli consulate in New York and identify Jewish businessmen in the city who were former or current members of the Israeli Defense Forces (IDF) for “either assassination or recruitment purposes,” according to the FBI report.
The list of surveillance targets is also said to have included the federal building in Manhattan where the FBI has its offices and a Secret Service facility in Brooklyn. Kourani allegedly made videos of a U.S. Army Armory in Manhattan, and JFK airport.
In the meantime, he and his wife had two children. One of the kids triggered a brief interruption in the e-mail communications he maintained with his handler via a Toshiba laptop. “His daughter spilled something on it,” an FBI report says.
The Toshiba was destroyed, but Kourani purchased an Apple laptop and allegedly continued his double life. He might have been the perfect sleeper had he not gone into the counterfeit clothing business. He was caught with 190 pairs of Ugg boots after he ran a stop sign in Queens in November 2013.
“I make about two dollars per pair,” the resulting police report quotes him saying. “I buy them for 20 dollars.”
The arrest prompted the NYPD Intelligence Division to interview Kourani on a number of occasions. He came to the further attention of law enforcement in September of 2015, when arriving from a trip to Lebanon back to the same airport he had extensively surveilled.
“Law enforcement personnel determined that Kourani’s cellphone did not contain a memory card, but found a memory card secreted under a travel sticker affixed to Kourani’s U.S. passport,” the complaint reports.
Kourani had gone seven years as an alleged sleeper agent without being activated in any operational capacity. He deduced that the most likely reason was Hezbollah’s 2015 discovery that Mohammad Shawraba, the very man in charge of external operations and the revenge mission in particular, was an Israeli mole. Shawraba was said to have sabotaged numerous attack plans while the sleeper agents slumbered on.
On April 1, 2016—“April’s Fools Day,” Kourani would note—he stopped into his regular Starbucks in Queens. A man approached and showed him an FBI badge.
“We know your affiliation with Hezbollah,’” the agent said.
“You most likely have the wrong person,” Kourani said.
At a McDonald’s next door, the agent handed him a file folder containing a cellphone.
“I'm going to reach you at that phone number,” the agent said. “Make sure that no one knows that you have that phone.” The FBI repeatedly called Kourani over the days ahead to arrange meetings, during which they urged him to become an informant.
The day then came when an attorney Kourani had retained left a voicemail message with the FBI. In a series of meetings at his lawyer’s office, Kourani is said to have told the agents about his life as a sleeper agent, but the FBI remained convinced he was not telling all he knew. The agents sought to shake more out of him. On June 1, 2018, the agents quietly arrested him up in the Bronx, where he was living with relatives after separating from his wife. He was booked on eight counts of terrorism-related offenses at the same federal building he had surveilled for Hezbollah, but waived a court appearance and the criminal complaint was sealed. He was held overnight at a nearby Marriott Hotel.
“We thought keeping him there in custody versus in a prison would help preserve the possibility of cooperation,” the agent would testify. The next day, the agents and prosecutors concluded that Kourani was still holding back and would not make a reliable informant. He was brought to court and the criminal complaint against him was unsealed. He was held without bail. Search warrants were executed for his emails and internet history, as well as his Bronx apartment above Naomi Rodriguez. Agents there found lined notebook paper on which Kourani appeared to have handwritten notes in English concerning what he wanted from the FBI, including cash and an apartment in a Manhattan building with a doorman.
Kourani retained a new lawyer, Alexei Schacht, who sought to suppress what amounted to a multi-installment confession. The judge ruled the statements to the FBI admissible and they are expected to be used against him at the trial set to commence Monday.
Up in the Bronx, Rodriguez told The Daily Beast that Kourani was living directly above her with a cousin and the cousin’s teenage son. She described the teenager as, “a good kid… really good,” adding, “We don't have an elevator. When I do food shopping, he helps me carry some bags or helps me with the shopping cart.”She could only remember seeing Kourani once, as she is seldom home, leaving early to work 12-hour shifts as an EMT and returning late from attending school to become a paramedic. She is also raising two boys of her own, aged 10 and 4.
Of the accused terror sleeper agent who was her upstairs neighbor, she observed, “At the end of the day he was still willing to answer that phone call and do what they asked. You’re saying, ‘Okay, call me when you need me.’”
She added, “Being willing is just as guilty.”

Latest LCCC English Miscellaneous Reports & News published on May 07-08/19
Europe 'will reimpose sanctions' if Iran fails nuclear deal commitments
Reuters/May 07/2019/PARIS: European countries will reimpose sanctions on Iran if it reneges on commitments under its nuclear deal, a source at the French presidency said on Tuesday, after Tehran said it would scale back its compliance a year after Washington pulled out. Iran dismissed a US announcement of the deployment of an aircraft carrier to the Middle East as old news, recycled for psychological warfare, and said it would soon announce plans to roll back some of its commitments under the 2015 deal. Tensions have risen on the eve of the anniversary of President Donald Trump’s withdrawal from the nuclear deal, under which Iran agreed to curbs on its nuclear program in return for the lifting of international sanctions. The Trump administration has restored US sanctions and extended them, effectively ordering countries around the world to stop buying Iranian oil or face sanctions of their own.
Iran has continued complying with the deal. Washington’s European allies, which oppose the US pull-out, have tried and failed to come up with ways to blunt the economic impact of the US move while urging Iran to continue to comply. Iranian media reported that Tehran will write to the countries still signed up to the deal — US allies Britain, France and Germany as well as Russia and China — on Wednesday to give them details about plans to “diminish its commitments” under the deal. Iranian state news reports have said Iran does not plan to pull out of the deal, but will revive some nuclear activity that was halted under it. The French presidential source said the European countries did not yet know precisely what steps Iran was now planning, but they would have to reimpose sanctions on Iran if those steps amount to reneging on the deal. “We do not want Tehran to announce tomorrow actions that would violate the nuclear agreement, because in this case we Europeans would be obliged to reimpose sanctions as per the terms of the agreement,” the source said. “We sent messages to Tehran to say that we were determined to implement the agreement, that we really wanted them to stay in this agreement even though we took into account the complexity of the situation and passed on the same messages to our American allies,” the French source said. US officials have spoken in recent days of intelligence suggesting a military threat from Iran, although they have not given specific details.
“PSYCHOLOGICAL WARFARE“
US national security adviser John Bolton said on Sunday the United States was deploying the Abraham Lincoln carrier strike group and a bomber task force to the Middle East in a warning over threats by Iranian forces. But Keyvan Khosravi, spokesman for Iran’s Supreme National Security Council, said the Abraham Lincoln was already due in the Gulf and dismissed the announcement as a “clumsy” attempt to recycle old news for “psychological warfare.” The United States typically rotates an aircraft carrier in the Gulf to serve as the flagship of its Fifth Fleet based in Bahrain. The previous carrier in the area, the John C Stennis, left in April to sail for home at the end of its deployment. Acting US Defense Secretary Patrick Shanahan said on Monday he had approved dispatching the carrier strike group and bombers due to indications of a “credible threat by Iranian regime forces.” He gave no details of underlying intelligence.
Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif said on Twitter: “If US and clients don’t feel safe, it’s because they’re despised by the people of the region — blaming Iran won’t reverse that.”Iran’s state-run Press TV earlier said: “The deployment seems to be a ‘regularly scheduled’ one by the US Navy, and Bolton has just tried to talk it up.”A military adviser to Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei said the United States was “neither willing nor capable” of military action against Iran,” the semi-official news agency ISNA reported. As jitters over the war of words rose, Iran’s rial currency extended its fall on Tuesday, hovering around a seven-month low of 150,500 against the US dollar on the unofficial market, foreign exchange websites reported. Since withdrawing from the nuclear deal, Washington has given waivers to some countries, mainly in Asia, to keep buying Iranian oil for a limited time. But last week it said it would now end the waivers to reduce Iran’s crude exports to zero. The administration also blacklisted Iran’s elite Revolutionary Guard Corps as terrorists. The Guards control a large swathe of Iranian industry, so their blacklisting could make it harder for foreign companies to do business with Iran. Iran has responded by declaring all US forces in the Middle East to be terrorists. It has also made threats to close the strategic Strait of Hormuz in the Gulf if Tehran were barred from using it. Around 30 percent of the world’s seaborne oil exports pass through the strait. While neither Shanahan nor Bolton elaborated on the gist of US intelligence, other US officials told Reuters there were “multiple, credible threats” against US forces on land, including in Iraq, by Iran and proxy forces, and at sea.

Iran to Restart Some Nuclear Activity in Response to U.S. Withdrawal from Nuclear Deal
Reuters/May 07/2019/Iran will restart part of its halted nuclear program in response to the U.S. withdrawal from a landmark 2015 nuclear deal but does not itself plan to pull out of the agreement, the state-run IRIB news agency reported on Monday. Citing a source close to an official commission which oversees the nuclear deal, IRIB reported that President Hassan Rouhani would announce that Iran would reduce some of its “minor and general” commitments under the deal on May 8 - exactly one year after U.S. President Donald Trump announced the U.S. pullout. Trump subsequently reimposed tough sanctions on Iran, including on its lifeblood oil exports with the stated intent of reducing them to zero and starving Iran’s economy. “The Islamic Republic of Iran in reaction to the exit of America from the nuclear deal and the bad promises of European countries in carrying out their obligations will restart a part of the nuclear activities which were stopped under the framework of the nuclear deal,” the source said, according to IRIB. Similarly, the semi-official Iranian Students’ News Agency (ISNA) reported that Iran on Wednesday will announce “reciprocal actions” to the U.S. withdrawal from the nuclear deal, quoting “knowledgeable sources”. Some European Union leaders had been unofficially told of Iran’s decision, the report said. The United States acted on Friday to force Iran to stop producing low-enriched uranium and expanding its only nuclear power plant.
Trump, who was not in office when the nuclear deal was negotiated, said it was flawed in Iran’s favor for doing nothing to curb its ballistic missile program or its support of proxy forces in several Middle East wars. Iran has said its development of ballistic missiles has nothing to do with its nuclear activity and is wholly defensive in nature, and that its support for allies around the Middle East is not Washington’s business.
U.S. DEPLOYMENT TO MIDDLE EAST
Under the 2015 deal, Iran restricted the capacity of its uranium enrichment program - widely seen as a route to developing a nuclear weapon - in exchange for a lifting of most international sanctions. U.N. nuclear inspectors have repeatedly verified Iranian compliance with the accord. Iran has denied ever pursuing a nuclear weapons program. The other signatories to the deal - European powers Germany, France and Britain - and Russia and China remain committed to it. The EU has been looking into ways of preserving its economic benefits that Iran says must stay or it could abandon the deal.
The Trump administration is now deploying a carrier strike group and bombers to the Middle East in response to troubling “indications and warnings” from Iran and to show the United States will retaliate with “unrelenting force” to any attack, U.S. national security adviser John Bolton said on Sunday. Bolton - who has spearheaded an increasingly hawkish U.S. policy on Iran - said the decision, which could exacerbate tensions between the two countries, was meant to send a “clear and unmistakable message” of U.S. resolve to Tehran. U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo also issued a warning to the Islamic Republic on Sunday. “It is absolutely the case that we have seen escalatory actions from the Iranians and it is equally the case that we will hold the Iranians accountable for attacks on American interests,” Pompeo told reporters aboard a flight en route to an Arctic Council meeting in Finland. If these actions take place, if they do by some third-party proxy, a militia group, Hezbollah, we will hold the Iranian leadership directly accountable for that.”

Escalation in Syria's Idlib Rattles Months-old Truce
AFP/Tuesday 07th May 2019/
Air strikes and shelling killed eight civilians in northwestern Syria Tuesday after deadly clashes between pro-government forces and jihadists rattled a months-old truce and sparked a new wave of displacement. At least 53 fighters have been killed since Monday, in one of the deadliest flare-ups since a demilitarised zone around the Idlib region was agreed in September last year, the Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said. Several deadly skirmishes have occurred since the deal was reached in Russia but the last few weeks have seen an uptick in violence inside the planned buffer zone. The region of some three million people is under the control of a former Al-Qaeda affiliate in one of the last parts of Syria President Bashar al-Assad has yet to take back. His government had threatened an all-out assault on the area last year but that was averted by the deal for a de-militarised buffer zone between his ally Moscow and rebel backer Ankara. A surge in attacks since April 20 has raised new fears a government offensive is imminent, prompting thousands of civilians to flee their homes towards quieter areas deeper inside Idlib province. "This is the third time we have been displaced but this time is the scariest," said Abu Ahmad, a 40-year-old from southern Idlib who was fleeing with his family towards areas near the border with Turkey on Tuesday. "Overflights by warplanes and shelling have been relentless," said the father of three, his blue pick-up truck stacked with mattresses, bed sheets and household appliances.
'Urgent de-escalation'
Battles between jihadists and pro-government forces raged overnight around a hilltop in the northern countryside of Hama province, following an advance by Assad's forces. Twenty-four pro-government fighters were killed in fierce fighting, the Observatory said. Twenty-nine jihadists were also killed. They were members of Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS), a group dominated by fighters from a former Al-Qaeda affiliate, and of the Turkistan Islamic Party, a Uighur-dominated jihadist group. Fighting subsided early Tuesday after pro-government forces thwarted several counter attacks and consolidated new positions, Observatory chief Rami Abdul Rahman told AFP. But, the air and artillery bombardment continued for an eighth straight day, killing eight civilians, the war monitor said. At least nine civilians were killed in shelling and air strikes on Monday. State news agency SANA said Syrian troops launched rocket attacks on armed groups in northwestern Hama province on Tuesday, killing several fighters, but it did not provide any toll. UN chief Antonio Guterres has called "for an urgent de-escalation of the situation as the holy month of Ramadan begins" and urged "the parties to recommit fully to the ceasefire arrangements of the memorandum signed on 17 September 2018." A UN statement said Guterres was alarmed by "reports of aerial attacks on population centres and civilian infrastructure". At least seven health facilities have been hit since April 28, it said. Nine schools have also been struck since April 30, and many more have closed their doors indefinitely, it added.
'Limited offensive'-
It remains unclear whether the Syrian government and its Russian ally are planning to launch a full-scale assault, but Aaron Lund of the Century Foundation said "a limited offensive into Idlib, peeling off a few areas, should be easily within their capabilities." He said the recapture of two key highways running through Idlib -- the M4 and the M5 -- could be among the "many goals" behind such an operation. Under the September deal, hardliners were supposed to withdraw from the planned buffer zone, allowing traffic to once again flow along the two strategic highways, which connect government-held areas with the Turkish border. Turkey has failed, however, to secure the jihadists' withdrawal, prompting government forces to take matters into their own hands, Syria specialist Fabrice Balanche said. Taking the two highways would help Assad boost the recovery of Syria's nearby second city Aleppo, which remains cut off from most of its countryside and poorly connected to the rest of the country, he told AFP. "Restoring traffic on these two axes will reduce transport costs to Aleppo," he said. Retaking the two highways would also cut the rebel-held region in two, making it easier for government forces to recapture its southern part and isolate the jihadists in the north.

More than 150,000 displaced in northwest Syria in one week: UN
Arab News/May 07/2019/KAFR NABL, Syria: Violence in the northwestern Syrian region of Idlib has displaced more than 150,000 people in the past week, the UN said Tuesday, as the regime and Russia upped deadly bombardment of the militant bastion. The uptick in strikes and shelling on the region dominated by Syria’s former Al-Qaeda affiliate has also knocked 12 hospitals and 10 schools out of action, it said. The militant stronghold has since September been protected from a massive regime offensive by a buffer zone deal inked by Damascus ally Russia and rebel backer Turkey. But the region of some three million people has come under increasing bombardment since the militant Hayat Tahrir Al-Sham group took full control of it in January. On Tuesday, air strikes and shelling killed 13 civilians in an eighth day straight of bombing, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said. “We are alarmed by ongoing reports of aerial attacks on population centers and civilian infrastructure,” said David Swanson, a spokesman for the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA). “More than 152,000 women, children and men have been displaced in Aleppo and Idlib governorates over the past week alone,” he told AFP. The recent surge in attacks has raised new fears a government offensive is imminent, prompting thousands to hit the road. “This is the third time we have been displaced but this time is the scariest,” said Abu Ahmad, a 40-year-old from southern Idlib who was fleeing Tuesday with his family toward areas near the border with Turkey. “Overflights by warplanes and shelling have been relentless,” said the father of three, his blue pick-up truck stacked with mattresses and household appliances.
The Idlib region includes a large part of the province of the same name, as well as adjacent parts of Aleppo and Hama provinces. President Bashar Assad’s regime is in control of around 60 percent of the country eight years into the civil war, but Idlib is among the areas still outside government control. Battles between militants and pro-government forces raged overnight around a hilltop in the northern countryside of Hama province, following an advance by Assad’s forces. Twenty-four pro-government fighters and 29 militants were killed in fierce fighting, the Britain-based Observatory said. The militants were members of HTS, and of the Turkistan Islamic Party, a Uighur-dominated militant group. State news agency SANA said Syrian troops launched rocket attacks on armed groups in northwestern Hama province on Tuesday, killing several fighters, but it did not provide any toll. UN chief Antonio Guterres has called “for an urgent de-escalation of the situation as the holy month of Ramadan begins” and urged “the parties to recommit fully to the cease-fire arrangements” of the September deal. French President Emmanuel Macron on Twitter demanded “a halt to the violence and support to the UN in backing a necessary political solution.”
OCHA said that bombardment on the Idlib region since April 28 had also killed three health workers.To the west of the region on Tuesday, the Al-Qaeda-linked Hurras Al-Deen militant group attacked pro-government positions, killing nine loyalists and three militants, the Observatory said.
It remains unclear whether the Syrian government and its Russian ally are planning to launch a full-scale assault. Aron Lund, from the US think tank The Century Foundation, said “a limited offensive into Idlib, peeling off a few areas, should be easily within their capabilities.” He said the recapture of two key highways running through Idlib — the M4 and the M5 — could be among the “many goals” behind such an operation. Under the September deal, hard-liners were supposed to withdraw from the planned buffer zone, allowing traffic to once again flow along the two strategic highways, which connect government-held areas with the Turkish border. Turkey has failed, however, to secure the militants’ withdrawal, prompting government forces to take matters into their own hands, Syria specialist Fabrice Balanche said. Taking the two highways would help Assad boost the recovery of Syria’s nearby second city Aleppo, which remains cut off from most of its countryside and poorly connected to the rest of the country, he told AFP. “Restoring traffic on these two axes will reduce transport costs to Aleppo,” he said. Retaking the road between the regime’s coastal stronghold of Latakia and Aleppo in particular would cut the rebel-held region in two, making it easier for government forces to recapture its southern part and isolate the militants in the north, Balanche added.

Anger in Istanbul as protesters reject re-run of election for city’s mayor
Arab News/May 07/2019/ISTANBUL: Street protests erupted, the lira plunged in value and Turkey’s stock market plummeted on Tuesday after election authorities ordered a rerun of the vote for mayor of Istanbul. The Supreme Election Council accepted a claim by President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s ruling AK Party of “irregularities” in the March vote, when former Prime Minister Binali Yildirim lost to Ekrem Imamoglu of the opposition Republican People’s Party (CHP). When the June 23 repeat vote was announced the Turkish lira slid 1.5 percent past the 6.15 per dollar threshold, Istanbul’s stock market and government bonds fell, and protesters took to the streets. “The will of the people has been trampled on,” said centrist IYI Party leader Meral Aksener. Senior European Parliament member Guy Verhofstadt said the “outrageous decision highlights how Erdogan’s Turkey is drifting toward a dictatorship.”
The rerun election was a “seismic event in Turkish history,” said Soner Cagaptay, director of the Turkish Program at the Washington Institute. “Turkey has been holding free and fair elections since the 1950s,” he said. “Never before has a party refused to accept the outcome of the election. Erdogan is saying, ‘Let’s vote until the governing party wins’.”The AKP’s Yildirim might still struggle to win the rerun after other parties threatened to unite against him. The pro-Kurdish Peoples Democratic Party (HDP) said it would repeat its policy from March of not contesting the election, which helped the CHP’s Imamoglu. The Islamist Saadet (Felicity) Party and the Democratic Left Party said they may also stand aside in favor of Imamoglu. The election council’s decision shows that Erdogan now dominates almost all institutions in Turkey, Wolfango Piccoli, co-president of Teneo Intelligence in London, told Arab News. “It will result in a lose-lose situation regardless of the outcome,” he said. “It not only intensifies Turkey’s vulnerability to market fluctuations ahead of the new vote, but it also shows that the AKP is willing to sacrifice the economy before ceding any power.”

Six ministers face sack in Iraq Cabinet shake-up
Arab News/May 08/2019/BAGHDAD: Six Iraqi government ministers, including Oil Minister Thamir Ghadhban and Electricity Minister Luay Al-Khatteeb, are expected to lose their jobs in a major reshuffle of the Cabinet in Baghdad.
The shake-up in Prime Minister Adel Abdul-Mahdi’s government is part of a turf war between the US and Iran for power and influence in Iraq, which has hamstrung his attempts to form a government since he was sworn into office in October 2018, five months after bitterly contested elections. “Iraq is the chessboard that Iran and America are wrestling on. Upcoming interrogations of ministers and dismissals are part of this wrestling,” a leading negotiator told Arab News. “Both sides have tools in Iraq and both are trying to trim each other’s nails.” The government in Baghdad was formed last year, after months of wrangling, in a deal finally thrashed out between Reformation, the largest parliamentary bloc led by the anti-Iran Shiite cleric Muqtada Al-Sadr, and Al-Binna’a, the largest pro-Iranian bloc led by Hadi Al-Amiri, head of Badr organization. Even then, the two blocs were unable to agree on candidates for the two key security ministerial posts of defense and interior. They are now expected to be filled as part of the latest agreement. Tension between Washington and Tehran is rising as the anniversary approaches of President Donald Trump’s withdrawal from the 2015 nuclear deal and the reimposition of crippling economic sanctions. Iraq is at the center of that tension. On Monday the US announced deployment of an aircraft carrier strike force to the Gulf in response to an “escalated threat” from Iran. US officials did not specify the location of the threat, but are known to be concerned about the activities of Iran-backed militias in Iraq. Against this background, the US and its allies in Iraq believe Abdul-Mahdi has moved too close to Tehran, and changes in the government to restore balance are the solution, negotiators told Arab News. The ministries involved will be oil, electricity, water resources, industry, health and communications. “Abdul-Mahdi himself will not be toppled, no one is able to do so, but the Cabinet reshuffle will take place soon,” a key negotiator told Arab News. “The situation is serious and our discussions have focused on the importance of fortifying the internal situation. “Iraqi and European mediators are trying to reach understandings and calm the situation between Iran and America, because we believe Iraq is in the midst of the storm and we Iraqis will pay the biggest price as a result.”

IMF Chief Says US-China Tensions 'Threat' to World Economy
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/May 07/2019/The head of the International Monetary Fund said Tuesday that fresh trade tensions between the United States and China were the main threat to the world economy. "Clearly the tensions between the United States and China are the threat for the world economy," Christine Lagarde told journalists at a conference in Paris, adding that recent "rumours and tweets" made an agreement between the countries less likely. President Donald Trump jolted global markets on Monday by threatening on Twitter that tariffs already imposed on $200 billion in Chinese exports to US would more than double to 25 percent on Friday from their current level of 10 percent. Also speaking at the Paris Forum event, French Economy Minister Bruno Le Maire warned about the impact of a trade war between the world's two biggest economies. "We are following the current negotiations very closely between China and the United Staters and we want them to respect the principals of transparency and multilateralism," he said. He called on the two sides to "avoid taking decisions that would threaten and would undermine global growth in the months ahead." "Increasing tariffs is always a dead-end and a negative decision for the whole world, for the United States, for China, for the eurozone, for Europe and world growth," he said. China said Tuesday its top trade negotiator will visit the United States for talks with his American counterparts this week. The countries have been locked in talks to resolve tensions that have seen both of them impose tariffs on goods worth $360 billion. Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin has described the negotiations as 90 percent complete but told reporters that in recent days the talks went "substantially backward", which he blamed on China reneging on previous commitments.

Latest LCCC English analysis & editorials from miscellaneous sources published on May 07-08/19
Welcome to the Post-Middle East ISIS

Hassan Hassan/ Foreign Policy/May 07/2019
On Monday, the Islamic State released a video of Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi holding a meeting with three members in a traditional Arab home setting. It was Baghdadi’s first public appearance since he declared himself a caliph from the pulpit of an iconic 12th-century mosque in Mosul in the summer of 2014.
The message of the video, however, was not just to show that Baghdadi was still alive; the group could have made that point without the risks involved in the production and release of a video at a time when the coalition led by the United States is still fully deployed in Iraq and Syria. The message, rather, was far more ambitious. Above all, it was an announcement of the group’s wider geographic ambitions.
Baghdadi’s appearance was in large part designed to inaugurate a new chapter in his organization’s life, in which it moves beyond its territorial loss in Iraq and Syria. In the video, Baghdadi bragged about new oaths of allegiance extended to him from jihadis in Mali, Burkina Faso, Afghanistan, and Sri Lanka. The video ends with footage showing Baghdadi being briefed about various foreign franchises, including a new one in Turkey.
The continuing loyalty of these remote affiliates to the Islamic State despite the collapse of the caliphate in Syria is a huge win for the organization. It shows that the Islamic State is poised to export the unique terrorism formula it perfected in Iraq a decade ago to a broader region, ranging from India to West Africa, as it shifts from governing as a caliphate to operating an insurgency. As one sign of its success, the group announced its first-ever attacks in the Democratic Republic of the Congo and claimed the bombings in Sri Lanka last month.
This trend should not be surprising: It has been underway since 2016, when the tactics and rhetoric of the Islamic State’s regional affiliates increasingly resembled the central organization. In Sinai and Afghanistan, for example, regional branches started to emphasize an ideology focused on sectarian attacks, against Christians or Shiites, reflecting the group’s approach in Iraq since 2003. By dispatching long-standing operatives to lead or help run these branches, the Islamic State seems to have successfully molded them in its image. This has helped it to maintain control over these regional offshoots despite its tumultuous collapse in Iraq and Syria.
And in doing so, it has exported the specific jihadi brand it built in Iraq—known for its uncompromising, vicious, and sectarian strategy—even relative to that of al Qaeda and the Taliban. In Egypt, the group carried out numerous attacks targeting Coptic Egyptians over the past few years, and attacks against Shiites in Afghanistan feature prominently in the group’s operations there. In attacking Shiite civilians in Afghanistan and Yemen, Islamic State media outlets do not even add a reasoning for the killings. Being Shiite automatically makes one a legitimate target for the group, which is unusual even for other extremist jihadi groups. From the Islamic State’s point of view, the strategy of heightening brutality and sectarianism was effective, allowing it to rise from its original defeat in Iraq in 2008. In Iraq, the group pit communities against each other, targeted places of worship, deterred locals from cooperating with the government, and hunted local rivals who could pose a threat to it in the future. By the time it captured one-third of Iraq in 2014, it had established itself as the only viable force capable of controlling the areas and fighting the government, almost uncontested on a local level.
In his remarks, Baghdadi refers to his group’s strategy for survival as a “war of attrition,” which also echoes the group’s propaganda since it started losing major strongholds three years ago. To understand where the Islamic State is heading next, it is important to pay a closer look to the long-game strategy that marked its original rise, not just the methods that came to be associated with the Islamic State in recent years, such as control of territory.
The Islamic State’s history of rising from the ashes in Iraq after 2008 shapes the organization’s thinking more than anything else, evident in the frequent references to that experience in its publications and statements for the past three years.
The situation for the group today resembles that earlier period, only on a broader geographic scale—which is why it is trying to replicate the same blueprint, which enabled it to eradicate its rivals, entrench itself locally, and ultimately present itself as the last flag for those fighting a central government. In Iraq and Syria since 2016, the group reverted to old tactics of assassinating community leaders, buying locality, and planting sleeper cells to conduct underground operations not just to fight its enemies but also to empty the areas in which it operates of any potential rivals. These tactics were detailed in a plan published in online jihadi forums in December 2009.
The spread of global jihad under the Islamic State banner will likely prove both an opportunity and a burden for its affiliates, as it will distinguish them from other violent rivals but also alienate local communities. Nevertheless, the Islamic State’s plan to entrench itself locally throughout the broader region is arguably the most serious threat posed by the group today. The fact that its model evidently worked after the group’s defeat in 2008 makes it easier for the Islamic State to maintain the loyalty of many of its members and support networks and to persuade new recruits further afield to subscribe to its ideology.
Ultimately, Baghdadi’s video marks the failure of the U.S.-led coalition to capture Baghdadi and dismantle his organization. It demonstrates the health of both Baghdadi and his organization—refuting recent rumors that he was ailing—and allows them to boast about a major terrorist attack, their expansion to new places, and the recruitment of new members. In this sense, the Islamic State is once again a step ahead of the U.S.-led coalition. Policymakers must recognize this nebulous aspect of the group’s growth if they are to prevent it from rising again.
The organization has transitioned safely from controlling territory to its next phase of operation without fracture, and its ability to entrench itself locally throughout the region, as it did in Iraq after 2008, could lay the groundwork for another 2014 moment, except on a larger scale than just Iraq and Syria.

Kushner's Middle East Mission Impossible
Aaron David Miller/The Hill/May 07/2019
The first time I met Jared Kushner, I told him that I wish my father-in-law had as much confidence in me as his had in him because he had given him a mission impossible. He laughed and acknowledged that it was hard, but his father in-law saw Israeli-Palestinian peace as a critical issue, and now was the time to tackle it. In subsequent meetings I made clear that if he succeeded and came out with a plan that was deemed fair and serious, I’d be the first to break open the champagne. But that’s a big "if." As we await the much-delayed but now almost certain-to-be-launched June peace plan, it’s worth trying to separate fact from fantasy and lay out some harsh realities about the Trump administration’s still-opaque approach to Israeli-Palestinian peacemaking that is almost certain to doom its success. But this may not matter. The administration’s more important goal is to reframe U.S. policy and permanently kill an already fraught two-state solution.
Ignoring the past
In an interview Thursday night discussing his peace plan, Jared Kushner volunteered that given the differences between Israel and Palestine on the issue of statehood, “let’s just not say it." It's the clearest indication yet that a Palestinian state won’t be formally addressed in his forthcoming plan.
That was a consistent theme in our conversations about a two-state solution: “If that would’ve worked, we would’ve have made peace a long time ago," he told me. The two-state solution was in deep trouble long before Trump came along. But if Kushner wants to end the conflict, he cannot simply will the past away. He has to find an alternative approach to overcome two mission impossibles: Convince Palestinians and Arab states to participate in a process that departs fundamentally from their longstanding and deeply entrenched narrative of an independent state with East Jerusalem as its capital.
End the Israeli occupation in a way that separates Palestinians from Israelis and gives the former control over the vast majority of the West Bank where 2.6 million Palestinians reside. The two-state solution may be near death; but killing it — as the Trump administration wants to do — without a credible alternative — and one does not come to mind — won’t end the conflict.
Misreading the present
To the administration’s credit, it has helped to cultivate two new realities that if managed adroitly in the hands of a skillful mediator, might have been used to advance a serious peace process: It has sought to build on the emerging anti-Iranian alignment between the Gulf states, particularly Saudi Arabia, and Israel and to enlist the Arab states in the peace process; and it has gained Israel’s confidence.
But on the first point, it has overestimated how willing the Saudis would be to pressure Palestinians and reach out to Israel without serious concessions to the Palestinians from both Israel and the U.S. Saudi King Salman has been consistent in supporting Palestinian statehood with a capital in Jerusalem as the "sine qua non" for Arab state support. On the second point, it has so overplayed its hand by showering the Israelis with goodies — recognizing Jerusalem as its capital, opening the U.S. Embassy there and recognizing Israeli sovereignty over Golan — that it’s compromised its role as an effective peace broker.
Gaining Israel’s confidence in this way would be a smart tactical move if the Kushner plan should ask Israel to make some very hard decisions. Then nobody could say that the Trump administration didn’t have Israel’s back and hadn’t gone to great lengths to protect it even as it asks for major concessions. But that remains to be seen.
Stacking the deck
Gaining the confidence of one party in a negotiation is fine as long as an effort is made to maintain the confidence of the other. Instead, the Trump administration has willfully pursued a policy of alienating Palestinians and marginalizing their role.
The administration has: eliminated the Jerusalem consulate as the Palestine Authority's (PA’s) main interlocutor; cut U.S. assistance to the PA;
closed the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) office in Washington;
withdrew the U.S. support for the U.N. Relief and Works Agency — the principal source of funding for Palestinian refugees; and trivialized the Palestinian stake in Jerusalem while they delegitimized their claim to statehood. The motivation for these actions seemed to be to administer reality therapy to the Palestinians and to remind them as the weakest party that they have a great deal to lose by not cooperating with Washington. But it’s a strategy that’s doomed to fail.
There is no ultimate deal
The sad and painful reality is that the Israeli-Palestinian peace process was on life support well before the Trump administration got to it. And despite the president’s aspirational goal of an ultimate deal to end the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, there is not a shred of empirical evidence to suggest it’s possible.
Neither Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu nor Palestine President Mahmoud Abbas is willing or able to make decisions on the core issues — borders, security, Jerusalem and refugees — necessary to even get close enough so that a skillful mediator can bridge the gaps.
The mistrust and suspicion between Israel and the PA, splits between Hamas and Fatah, the certainty of a new right-wing Israeli government and the bias of the Trump administration all but guarantee deadlock or worse.
The real agenda
So, if getting to negotiations, let alone a deal is unlikely, why push for a comprehensive peace plan? Instead, the real objective on the part of the Kushner team is to find a new approach that fundamentally transforms the traditional concept of two states and makes it almost impossible for a successor to return to something like it, especially if the Trump administration lasts until 2024. The administration has devalued the idea of two states, tilted heavily toward the Israelis on Jerusalem and acquiesced to a significant increase in settlement activity under Netanyahu. When asked in a congressional hearing for his reaction to Netanyahu’s promise  to annex parts of West Bank and settlements, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said nothing. Should this occur, the Trump administration’s legacy may not be that it killed the two-state solution; but it most certainly helped bury it.

Support for Israel in the US starting to shift
Yossi Mekelberg/Arab News/May 08/2019
In the US, a tectonic shift of support for Israel, away from liberals and Democrats toward Republicans and evangelicals, is currently taking place. In the short term, this might not worry Israel, as it has no immediate or threatening impact on relations between Washington and Tel Aviv. However, in the longer term, the nature of this shift contains the seeds of eradicating the moral, values-based and even sentimental commonalities in favor of passing short-term interests and an over-reliance on a dangerously distorted view held by Christian-evangelist Zionists, who support the Jewish state solely in the hope of fulfilling a biblical prophecy on how a “second coming” of Christ will be brought about.
There is a sense of complacency among Israel’s decision-makers, especially Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and his close circle, that Washington under the Donald Trump-Mike Pence stewardship has completely subscribed to their worldview. This, however, captures a particular moment in history and merely reflects a mishmash of nationalism, populism and messianism entwined with power politics. It is epitomized by a tendency to favor an ethnocentric, confrontational approach toward rivals and foes, and fewer attempts to understand their position and aim for workable compromises. However, last year’s mid-term congressional elections have already shown that the American public is fed up with, or at least skeptical about, this approach.
In this light, the findings of a Pew Research Center surveylast month, showing that a majority of Americans have a favorable view of the Israeli people but a very unfavorable view of their present government, should be taken as a warning sign to the Israeli administration. More specifically, the survey reveals a striking division between Republicans and Democrats in the way they view Israel and Palestine. It found that, while 61 percent of Republicans have a favorable view of Israel’s government, only 26 percent of Democrats view it favorably, against two-thirds with an unfavorable view.
Is this something Israel and its supporters should worry about? After all, it is supported by those who voted for the incumbent president, who might occupy the White House until 2024 — which might be perceived as an eternity in Israeli and Middle Eastern politics. Taking this approach to the decline in the Democrats’ support for Israel would be a gross misjudgment of the nature of relations between the two countries. The truth is that it should set alarm bells ringing in Tel Aviv. Reflecting on the roots of the deep and comprehensive support that the US has given to Israel, even when it was far from agreeing with it and against its better judgment, it is clear that the role of the Democrats has been crucial and invaluable.
In the years leading to Israel’s independence and in its immediate aftermath, there were Democratic presidents who supported the idea of a Jewish state, against the realpolitik-inclined advice of those, many of them Republicans, who saw it as endangering US interests in the region. On the day that Israel declared its independence, the US government under President Harry Truman, a Democrat, was the first to recognize the new state, with Truman declaring his wholehearted support.
While 61 percent of Republicans have a favorable view of Israel’s government, only 26 percent of Democrats view it favorably.
In the 1960s, it was another Democratic president, John F. Kennedy, who was the first to supply Israel with weapons, which opened the gates to one of the closest alliances, albeit informal, between the US and another country. The basis of this alliance and Washington’s provision of military, economic and diplomatic support was a mix of ideology, a sense of moral obligation and guilt in the aftermath of the Holocaust, and a response to domestic political pressures. In the post-1967 era, Israel’s military might turned it into a reliable and stable ally in a region of great strategic and economic importance, albeit with pockets of instability and elements that were unfriendly to the US.
As time goes by, the moral obligation and sense of guilt over failing to stop the genocide of the Jews by Nazi Germany and not opening the gates to Jews escaping the European hell is fading away, especially as Israel is now behaving immorally. A powerful source of support for Israel used to be its democratic character. But, in recent times, it has become at best a struggling democracy that occupies, blockades and oppresses nearly 5 million Palestinians in the West Bank and Gaza Strip, depriving them of their right to self-determination while building exclusively Jewish settlements in contravention of international law. Add to this the recent nation-state law, which enshrines the discrimination against Palestinians within Israel proper and makes them second-class citizens, and we begin to see more clearly why more liberal-minded Americans are finding it increasingly difficult to see Israel in a favorable light. The Democratic Party has always been considered a home for minorities and those less privileged in society — a defender of civil and human rights. Not surprisingly then, its supporters are shifting their sympathies toward the Palestinian people, even though, as the Pew survey shows, such sympathy does not extend to the Palestinian Authority and its leaders.
For now, those who expressed their reservations about the Israeli government still support the Israeli people. But for how long will they continue to differentiate between the two, before they send a message to Israel’s electorate that they also must be held accountable for the behavior of the very representatives they elect? It is also the case that the changing political scene and shifting demographics in the US are beginning to introduce politicians who are ready to publicly criticize Israel without fear of retribution.
Ultimately, the reason for the Democrats’ current skeptical view of Israel lies with the body blows that Netanyahu and his political partners are daily dealing to its democratic structures and to the prospect of peace with the Palestinians. This is a trend that is threatening the alliance between the two countries — a risk that Israel would be foolish not to avert.
**Yossi Mekelberg is professor of international relations at Regent’s University London, where he is head of the International Relations and Social Sciences Program. He is also an associate fellow of the MENA Program at Chatham House. Twitter: @YMekelberg

Can Trump get Iranian leaders to the negotiating table?

Camelia Entekhabifard/Arab News/May 08/2019
Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammed Javad Zarif was in New York late last month and he made an offer to the US government with a proposal to talk about prisoner exchanges or hostage releases
An answer to his approach came on May 4 — the date US President Donald Trump’s administration had to announce whether it would extend a waiver on exemptions to the Iran nuclear deal sanctions. The White House said it would extend the waivers that allow the countries signed up to the deal (Russia, China, France, the UK and Germany) to participate in civil nuclear projects with Tehran, but it is tightening the terms in an effort to increase pressure on the Iranian regime.
The waiver timetable had been agreed during the presidency of Barack Obama, with the US having to examine the facts of whether or not Iran had stayed committed to its obligations regarding its nuclear program every six months. Now, however, Trump has made changes to the terms of this agreement, reducing the waivers’ validity from 180 days to 90. In addition, State Department spokesperson Morgan Ortagus said in a statement that “assistance to expand Iran’s Bushehr Nuclear Power Plant beyond the existing reactor unit could be sanctionable.”
Trump withdrew the US from the Iran nuclear deal last year and has since promised to increase the sanctions pressure on Tehran by all means. He wants to make the rulers accept his invitation for talks with his administration on many issues and subjects, including Iran’s nuclear program.
This year, the Iranian currency has lost value rapidly and inflation has increased. The price of goods is skyrocketing, meaning middle-class families can hardly meet their household expenses, let alone the poor and needy, who have been driven to extreme poverty.
Following the economic sanctions, Trump did not extend the oil importing exemptions for eight countries on May 1, as he bids to makes the regime’s revenue from oil fall to zero. According to exports, it will be very hard or even impossible for oil sales to be reduced to zero, but the sanctions will have a big impact on the Tehran government’s annual budget.
Trump’s sanctions did not end there, as he also designated Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) as a Foreign Terrorist Organization. Iran’s national army has, since the 1979 revolution, been undermined by the Islamist regime because of its loyalty to the previous regime and the people of the nation, rather than the supreme leader. Instead, the IRGC has been trusted as the regime’s armed forces for the last 40 years. It has thus enjoyed the privilege to act as it sees fit and whenever needed by the system. Its roles include disciplining the public and crushing demonstrations, arresting and interrogating opposition members, operating abroad to assist Shiite militias, and, of course, guarding the revolution.
No one in the region, or in Iran or the US, wants this to develop into conflict, as everyone understands the consequences of such a move, but it seems all these sanctions come from a plan Trump has to finally make the ayatollahs sit down and talk. However, millions of Iranians are squeezed between the two sides and they are losing their hope of a positive outcome.
It seems that Trump wants to assure Tehran’s leaders they cannot wait until after the 2020 US presidential election to make up their mind.
It seems that Trump wants to assure Tehran’s leaders they cannot wait until after the 2020 US presidential election to make up their mind. The US president is eager to sort the issue out with the ayatollahs one way or the other.
When Trump began his presidential term, he wanted to show the American public that he can achieve everything he promised them. One such promise was tackling Iran’s disturbing behavior in the region and making a new deal with Tehran.
Now it is up to the Iranian regime, as Trump looks sincere and ready to stand by his actions. But it will be a hard task for him to get the ayatollahs to accept talks after they have shown so much resistance.
Camelia Entekhabifard is an Iranian-American journalist, political commentator and author of “Camelia: Save Yourself By Telling the Truth” (Seven Stories Press, 2008). Twitter: ​@CameliaFard