English LCCC Newsbulletin For Lebanese, Lebanese Related, Global News & Editorials
For November 01/2020
Compiled & Prepared by: Elias Bejjani

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Bible Quotations For today
I tell you, you are Peter, and on this rock I will build my church, and the gates of Hades will not prevail against it
Holy Gospel of Jesus Christ according to Saint Matthew 16/13-20/:’When Jesus came into the district of Caesarea Philippi, he asked his disciples, ‘Who do people say that the Son of Man is?’And they said, ‘Some say John the Baptist, but others Elijah, and still others Jeremiah or one of the prophets.’He said to them, ‘But who do you say that I am?’Simon Peter answered, ‘You are the Messiah, the Son of the living God.’And Jesus answered him, ‘Blessed are you, Simon son of Jonah! For flesh and blood has not revealed this to you, but my Father in heaven. And I tell you, you are Peter, and on this rock I will build my church, and the gates of Hades will not prevail against it. I will give you the keys of the kingdom of heaven, and whatever you bind on earth will be bound in heaven, and whatever you loose on earth will be loosed in heaven.’Then he sternly ordered the disciples not to tell anyone that he was the Messiah.”

Titles For The Latest English LCCC Lebanese & Lebanese Related News & Editorials published on November 01/2020

Health Ministry: 1,699 new Coronavirus cases, 12 deaths
US dollar exchange rate: Buying price at LBP 3850 selling price at LBP 3900
Annual Synod meeting concludes its works in Bkirki
Shalala outlines President Aoun's mandate achievements: First years were full of accomplishments at various levels, and those who do not see any positives wish to ignore the facts
Rahi: Authority in Lebanon Murdered its People
Report: Hariri Could Present Govt Format Saturday or Sunday
Aoun Complains of ‘Barricades’ against him as he Completes 4th Year as Lebanon’s President
FPM: To speed up government formation, refrain from linking it to any external development
Al-Akhbar: Three decades delay the formation of the government
Two questions not asked/Samir Attallah/Asharq Al Awsat/October 31/2020
Report: Druze Share in New Govt Emerges as Possible 'Obstacle'
The Druze knot brakes the government impulse … Aoun is a...
The Hariri government is waiting for someone to push it off...
Nicola Nassif wrote in “Al-Akhbar/October 31/2020

Titles For The Latest English LCCC Miscellaneous Reports And News published on
November 01/2020

Orthodox priest shot in Lyon, assailant flees in France’s third attack in two weeks
Macron Says Can 'Understand' Shock of Cartoons
The Nice attacker’s journey from illegal migrant to terrorist
Russia Pledges Help to Yerevan if Fighting Reaches Armenia
Satellite photos show new construction at Iranian nuclear site
Iranian Arab opposition group says Iran abducted former leader in Turkey
Instagram removes Khamenei’s French account after Nice attack
Armenia, Azerbaijan Trade Fresh Accusations of Karabakh Attacks
Sudan signs agreement with US restoring its sovereign immunity
Sudan: Deal with US blocks further compensation claims being filed against us
Fayez Al-Sarraj announces his retreat from the presidency of the Libyan...
Canada warns against Turkish breaches of arms sales agreements
Iraq reopens Tahrir square, epicenter of anti-government protests in Baghdad
At least three killed, 51 injured in southern Iraq blast targeting pipeline
Iraq Kurdish ex-governor wanted for corruption dies in US
For Justin Trudeau “freedom of expression has its limits”
Damascus Raises Price of Bread
UN Security Council Extends Mandate of MINURSO for a Year

 

Titles For The Latest LCCC English analysis & editorials from miscellaneous sources published on November 01/2020

The Choice Between Trump and Obama Foreign Policies/Sarah N. Stern/American Thinker/October 31, 2020
Shame on the Girl Scouts: Thin Skin instead of Thin Mints/Alan M. Dershowitz/Gatestone Institute./October 31/2020
Donald Trump’s Economy Really was Better than Obama’s/Karl W Smith/Bloomberg/October, 31/2020
From Spain to Italy, Europe Is Fed Up with Lockdowns/Ferdinando Giugliano/Bloomberg/October, 31/2020
Don't Ignore the Good News On Covid-19 From Asia/Lionel Laurent/Bloomberg/October, 31/2020
Message to Biden from the Arab world: No return to appeasing Iran/Baria Alamuddin/Arab News/October 31/2020

 

The Latest English LCCC Lebanese & Lebanese Related News & Editorials published on November 01/2020

Health Ministry: 1,699 new Coronavirus cases, 12 deaths
NNA/Saturday, 31 October, 2020
The Ministry of Public Health announced, on Saturday, the registration of 1,699 new Coronavirus infections, thus raising the cumulative number of confirmed cases to 81,228.
It also reported 12 death cases during the past 24 hours.

US dollar exchange rate: Buying price at LBP 3850 selling price at LBP 3900
NNA/Saturday, 31 October, 2020
The Money Changers Syndicate announced in a statement addressed to money changing companies and institutions Saturday’s USD exchange rate against the Lebanese pound as follows:
Buying price at a minimum of LBP 3850
Selling price at a maximum of LBP 3900

Annual Synod meeting concludes its works in Bkirki
NNA/Saturday, 31 October, 2020
Maronite Patriarch, Cardinal Beshara Rahi, held a Mass service on Saturday in Bkirki marking the end of the annual retreat for the Synod of Bishops, whereby he called for strengthening the Christian-Muslim partnership in the world and dispelling the climate of religions' conflict.
"Our Church strongly condemns the detestable exposure to religious symbols and the re-publication of insulting cartoons under the guise of freedoms and secularization, and at the same time it strongly condemns the act of beheading a teacher in front of his school and the slaughter of three worshipers inside a church in Nice, France," Rahi stressed. On the cabinet formation dossier, the Patriarch called for forming a new government away from the influence of politicians and partisans, who are held captives to their narrow interests and cheap calculations, for the country's sake.
 

Shalala outlines President Aoun's mandate achievements: First years were full of accomplishments at various levels, and those who do not see any positives wish to ignore the facts
NNA/Saturday, 31 October, 2020
Presidential Media Advisor, Rafik Shalala, hoped Saturday that "the next two years of President Michel Aoun's mandate will be productive, just as the first three years of his rule," noting that "despite the difficulties of the past fourth year, there are priorities, including reforms, that President Aoun believes in carrying out, and has committed himself before the Lebanese to achieving them within the upcoming two years, hoping that he will be aided to that effect.""There is also the fight against corruption with which he will proceed regardless of the circumstances and challenges, as well as the file of demarcating the southern maritime borders, in addition to taking care of social welfare projects," Shalala added. "The President of the Republic will also follow up on the issue of oil and gas exploration, as well as projects of direct interest to citizens, while constantly keeping an eye on the preservation of security and stability in the country," he asserted. Shalala's words came during an interview with "Sawt Al-Mada" Radio Channel today, on the eve of the start of President Aoun's fifth year in office, in which he outlined the most prominent achievements of the past four years of the President's term.
"The first years of President Aoun's mandate were full of achievements at various levels, but in the fourth year the negative facts were combined and poured all at once, starting with the turbulent conditions in the world and the Syrian war and its negative repercussions on Lebanon, then the outbreak of the Corona epidemic and its impact on citizens and the Lebanese economy, far-reaching the tragic Beirut Port explosion," highlighted Shalala.
"All of these factors occurred during the fourth year, which was full of negative events in most countries of the world, including Lebanon, and therefore it cannot be said that President Aoun's term was all bad," he explained. "Even in the fourth year, despite everything, laws, decisions and decrees were issued that dealt with matters of concern to all Lebanese and were of benefit to the nation and its people. As for those who do not see any positives throughout the whole mandate period, they want to ignore the facts, which cannot be ignored because they are constant and irrefutable," Shalala underscored. In this connection, he gave a brief overview about all that has been accomplished in the country at the levels of security, social welfare, economy, developmental projects, reform and combatting corruption, foreign policy, commitment to the Constitution, addressing the Syrian displacement and Palestinian refugees' files, initiating negotiations to demarcate the southern maritime borders, and embracing the demands of the people's uprising. Referring to the cabinet formation underway, Shalala said: "Everyone wants the birth of a new government today, before tomorrow, but everyone understands that the formation of governments in Lebanon is subject to certain balances and considerations."He added: "President Aoun is exerting every effort to ensure that the next government would be coherent, productive, and able to face the huge challenges, and he is in daily contact with Prime Minister-designate Saad Hariri to finalize the cabinet formation and eliminate the obstacles that arise from time to time." "The President of the Republic attaches great importance to the formation of the next government and the role it will play at various levels, based on the principles that he had set on the eve of the parliamentary consultations, which served as a road map for it," Shalala emphasized.

 

Rahi: Authority in Lebanon Murdered its People
Naharnet/Saturday, 31 October, 2020
In his fiercest verbal attack at officials, Maronite Patriarch Beshara al-Rahi snapped at them on Saturday urging them to “step down,” saying Lebanon's “political authority has murdered its people.”“The political authority has murdered its people and it must admit its failure to represent citizens and manage the country,” said Rahi. His remarks came in a sermon at the conclusion of the Holy Synod of the Bishops of the Maronite Church in Bkirki. “The authority has killed its people economically, financially, and in terms of living and development. It thrust them into a state of loss, anger, despair, revolution, emigration and survival,” stated the Patriarch. Rahi urged the “political group” to “admit its failure in gaining the people's trust and in managing the country.” He said it should “step down for the sake of Lebanon, even if only temporarily, to pave way for a unified government team to lead the country towards the path of advancement.”Rahi said “we want a government formation as per the constitution and National Pact. Any other government format is a waste of time,” he said.
 

Report: Hariri Could Present Govt Format Saturday or Sunday
Naharnet /Saturday, 31 October, 2020
Prime Minister-designate Saad Hariri is likely to visit Baabda presidential palace “either Saturday or Sunday” to hand the President a draft of the cabinet line-up, al-Anbaa daily reported. The daily attributed the information to sources from Hariri’s Center House who spoke on condition of anonymity. They said that Hariri “will head to Baabda either on Saturday afternoon or on Sunday to hand President Michel Aoun a draft of the government format they prepared together.”According to al-Anbaa, the sources preferred not to mention any obstacles that could hamper the formation process. “Nothing to be said before the two presidents meet,” the daily quoted them as saying.

 

Aoun Complains of ‘Barricades’ against him as he Completes 4th Year as Lebanon’s President
Beirut - Paula Astih/Saturday, 31 October, 2020
There is no doubt that the four years that Lebanese President Michel Aoun has spent in power have not been anything close to the people’s expectations. This is especially true for his Christian popular base that had for decades dreamed of his return to the Baabda presidential palace that he was forced to flee in 1990 when he was then head of the transitional government. The “strong” president, as his supporters like to describe him, has not been able to fulfill the pledges of “reform and change”. He has instead blamed others for “setting up barricades” that have impeded his ambitions.
Aoun was elected president in 2016 after a presidential settlement was struck with former Prime Minister Saad Hariri and after an agreement was reached with his rival, Samir Geagea, head of the Lebanese Forces. Both agreements had envisaged electing Aoun as president so that he can achieve his “reform” plans.However, the deal with the LF soon collapsed and the settlement with Hariri floundered last year when he resigned as premier in wake of massive anti-government protests that erupted in October.
Aoun was quick to turn on Hariri, saying he “lost a year and 14 days of my tenure due to the formation of governments that were headed by the PM.”Hariri was earlier this month designated as prime minister for the fourth time. Aoun’s bloc, the largest in parliament, did not nominate him to the post. Ahead of the parliamentary consultations that eventually led to the naming of the veteran politician, Aoun complained that some sides were “obstructing the realization of vital projects for the country.”
He also vowed that he will “continue to confront everyone who is preventing our people from carrying out reform and building the state.”Aoun’s latest televised appearance sparked a wave of criticism that called on him to resign if he is unable to achieve anything for the country.
This prompted his supporters to claim that the president already has limited constitutional powers, alleging that local and foreign powers were conspiring against him. MP of Aoun’s Lebanon Strong bloc, Alain Aoun said: “At the beginning of his term, the president was able to achieve several security achievements by resolving the Arsal outskirts clashes and defeating ISIS in Lebanon.”“On the financial level, budgets were approved after nearly a decade of disputes. Economically, the Cedre conference was held in April 2018 and Lebanon received international pledges worth 11 billion dollars. Politically, the proportional electoral law was approved, marking a qualitative shift in political life,” he told Asharq Al-Awsat.
The past two years, however, witnessed developments that brought this momentum to a halt, he said, citing political disagreements that led to the squandering of opportunities and several missteps. He also cited the October 17 revolution and its repercussions, as well as the financial collapse, the country’s isolation and the August 4 blast at Beirut port. “All of these developments worsened the situation and led us to where we are today,” he explained. “We should not surrender, but invest in the last opportunity that was granted to us in the shape of the French initiative that is aimed at stopping the downward spiral and kicking off Lebanon’s economic recovery.” The MP noted that Lebanon needed to address several “fundamental problems in its political system”. They demand development and amendments so that the country could become more productive and avoid impasses whenever disputes arise.
This can take place through constitutional amendments related to expanding the president’s authority, he remarked, adding, however, that priority at the moment must be addressing the financial crisis, implementing reforms and restoring local and international trust in Lebanon.
Political science professor Michel Doueihy said that since Aoun’s return to Lebanon from Paris exile in 2005, his behavior and political alliances all sought to build his legislative and executive power. He had no red lines and qualms about striking alliances with allies of the Syrian regime. His Reform and Change movement soon began to take on the practices of the parties that it had long criticized, namely the Amal movement of Speaker Nabih Berri. Doueihy told Asharq Al-Awsat: “Aoun’s political failure is part of the failure of the entire political system and authority. The alliance between sectarian parties and banks is what collapsed.” “Alleging that the president has lost his privileges is unfounded because even though the Taif Accord did diminish them, the president still retains major authority, such as approving government lineups, judicial appointments and others,” he said.


FPM: To speed up government formation, refrain from linking it to any external development
NNA/Saturday, 31 October, 2020
The "Free Patriotic Movement" political body held its periodic meeting today, chaired by its Chief, MP Gebran Bassil, following which an issued statement called for "accelerating the formation of the government and not linking it to any external factor or development, since this is a Lebanese matter, a constitutional duty, and Lebanon cannot afford to waste time any further."The FPM polite-bureau statement confirmed "respect for unified constitutional standards in the formation process," and reminded that "the French initiative, with its reform points, needs an effective and productive government of specialists who are capable of implementing its program." Therefore, it considered that "assigning more than one ministerial portfolio to each minister would be a blow to the principle of specialization, especially if the minister arbitrarily combines two portfolios that have no relation in their respective fields."
Moreover, the statement emphasized FPM's insistence and adherence to "conducting a forensic audit of the accounts of Lebanon's Central Bank, as a mandatory first step on the road to reform," and highlighted "the necessity of determining the causes of Lebanon's collapse due to the accumulated debts, corruption and economic downfall," pledging to resort to all means of pressure "to uncover the facts and address the political, legislative and popular obstructions."Over the recent regretful incidents in France, the FPM political body expressed its great concern for such acts "that are contradicting to the principles of freedom, dialogue and coexistence between cultures and religions," voicing its "rejection to any offense against religious and sacred symbols" and warning of the "repercussions and consequences of such disrespectful and condemned acts." It also denounced resorting to violence, murder and physical assault under the pretext of defending beliefs and sanctities.

Al-Akhbar: Three decades delay the formation of the government

Translated by AlKhaleej Today/October 31/2020
The beginning of the pitfalls of the number of ministers is not agreed upon. President Michel Aoun insists that the government include 20 ministers. Representatives of the Druze community who are opposed to the Progressive Socialist Party will be given a seat, and another seat will be given to the Catholic community. Aoun’s opponents accuse him that with this process, he wants to secure the obstructed third in his possession. On the other hand, Hariri believes that a government of 18 ministers is the ideal formula, bearing in mind that the presidential authorities do not consider it a “real knot, but rather it is dissolved upon agreement on other matters.”The second node is in the inter-sectarian rotation of the sovereign ministries. Contrary to all the leaked airspace, the issue was not resolved by keeping the Finance Ministry from the share of the Shiite community, in exchange for the rotation of other sovereign portfolios. The Presidency of the Republic believes that either rotation is the right of everyone, or the distribution remains as it was in previous governments. As for the third node, it is the distribution of service bags, “Whoever gets the health, work and energy bags …”. The sources deny that “Hezbollah has talked about exchanging the health bag for education, since it did not demand either of the two bags.”
 

Two questions not asked
Samir Attallah/Asharq Al Awsat/October 31/2020
Whenever I meet or call my dear countryman, Ghassan Salama, we exchange one question, first of all: What is the news of the country! Immigrants from previous generations used to call it “the country.” If one of them returns from Lebanon, he is asked about “the conditions of the country,” and if he returns, he is returned to the country. One day, Salama added to his international duties and academic seats, the position of the UN envoy to Libya. And in a spontaneous form, he added the same second question to the first in our meetings or conversations: What is the news of Libya? Of course, the two questions have one meaning, or one content: What is the good news from there? As for the other news, it is carried by anyone. That is, “whoever was not provided”, as Sayyid Tarfa bin Al-Abd predicted us in the old days, past the age and the time.
Despite the rulings, fears and gloom of “Corona”, Ghassan and I dated over a lunch in a Paris cafe, in the open air, who in Paris was divorced and cold together. After each of us returned home, I realized that we had talked about many things: the last art exhibitions supervised by his daughter, and his last purchases from the vegetable market. Because his first hobby is cooking, especially Halabi from him, which he learned from his wife. Of course, we did not fail to talk about the circumstances of time and the types of oppression. He had been waiting for the hour to resign from the Libyan mission, to hang around between the galleries and libraries of Paris and the sun shelter in southern France, and if the Coronian breaker would close all doors, including the doors of homes. All this before the general lockdown, which was announced later. So what do you think after he signed.
We talked about a lot: lectures he will give in Harvard, an offer to teach in Colombia. Two questions did not occur to me at all, nor did he have them, one of them old from the age of friendship, and the other important to Libya. No «Shaw news of the country». Nor «what news of Libya». There is no news in the crushed countries, neither the sects of Lebanon nor the regions of Libya. Neither western Tripoli, nor Tripoli al-Sham, nor hope nor life for whomever you call.
So; The question about “new” in this regard has become a kind of absurdity, and it raises a kind of distress in the hearts of the people of the country. Or the people of the two countries. What is new in Libya, in which Erdogan discovered that he had 350 thousand Turks, came to take them back with the new mercenary and “Janissary” armies. Just an old royal customs that refuse to acknowledge what has been new in this world from five centuries ago to this day.
As for the other country, ours, its news does not change. Its single title is the title of the Shushu play “Brother, Our Country.” These were the details of the news Two questions not asked | Middle east for this day. We hope that we have succeeded by giving you the full details and information. To follow all our news, you can subscribe to the alerts system or to one of our different systems to provide you with all that is new. It is also worth noting that the original news has been published and is available at eg24.news and the editorial team at AlKhaleej Today has confirmed it and it has been modified, and it may have been completely transferred or quoted from it and you can read and follow this news from its main source.

 

Report: Druze Share in New Govt Emerges as Possible 'Obstacle'
Naharnet/October 31/2020
The political efforts to form a new government are ongoing in Lebanon, amid alleged obstacles arising related to the ministerial representation of the Druze community, the Saudi Asharq el-Awsat reported on Saturday. MP Bilal Abdullah told the daily that Druze leader and head of the Progressive Socialist Party, ex-MP Walid Jumblat asked PM-designate Saad Hariri to “respect the Druze environment with the type of ministry to which it would be allocated.”Reports emerged that the environment ministry portfolio could be allocated to the PSP. According to Abdullah, “Hariri had promised Jumblat that the PSP would name the Druze ministers, unlike other parties," whose ministers get to be named by the PM-designate and President. The PSP MP said: “If the government consists of 20 ministers, the Druze share will be two ministers for the PSP. But if they insist otherwise, then let there be a Druze minister and a Christian one chosen by the PSP. "Let them give Talal Arslan a minister from their share,” said Abdullah, hinting at the PSP rival, Arslan.Abdullah said some "parties close to President Michel Aoun are trying to blackmail Jumblat and the PSP.”

The Druze knot brakes the government impulse … Aoun is a...
Translated by AlKhaleej Today/October 31/2020
In Asharq Al-Awsat, Caroline Akoum wrote in Asharq Al-Awsat, despite the insistence of those involved in the formation of the government to create an optimistic atmosphere, new old decades began to appear, the most recent of which is related to the Druze representation that would determine the number of ministers in the government, between 18 and 20 ministers. This knot stems from the “Progressive Socialist Party” insistence on obtaining the Druze share, based on an agreement between it and Prime Minister-designate Saad Hariri, while it appeared that the President of the Republic, Michel Aoun, had promised the head of the Democratic Party, MP Talal Arslan, to a Druze minister Sources familiar with communications say to Asharq Al-Awsat. The sources indicate that Aoun seeks for this purpose to increase the number of ministers to twenty, while Hariri is pushing for a government of 18 ministers, noting that Arslan refused to name Hariri, and launched an attack against him on the eve of the parliamentary consultations. Deputy in the “Progressive Socialist Party” Bilal Abdullah assured to “Asharq Al-Awsat” that the party’s leader, Walid Jumblatt, was a request from Hariri to respect the Druze environment with the type of ministry that will be allocated to it, and his recent promise that the Druze share of the socialist will be, that is to say, to be named. Like the other parties, the Druze ministers. Abdullah said that “if the government consists of 20 ministers, the Druze share will be two ministers for the socialist, and if they insist on the opposite, then let him be a Druze minister and another Christian (Catholic or Maronite) for the socialist, and let them give two Arsal a minister from their share,” considering that there is in the vicinity of President Michel Aoun is the one who is trying to blackmail Jumblatt and the socialist, similar to what happened when the last Hariri government was formed, and at that time they brought Minister Saleh al-Gharib.On the other hand, the opponents of the “socialist” have been active since the first day of Hariri’s assignment to demand a Druze minister in the upcoming government. And after Arslan, accompanied by the Minister of Social Affairs in the caretaker government, Ramzi Musharrafieh, visited the President of the Republic the day after Hariri was appointed, and so did the head of the “Tawhid” party, former MP Weam Wahhab; Yesterday Arslan and Wahab held a meeting, after which the latter demanded “not to blow up the balances” in the Druze community. Wahab pointed out, in a television interview, that “a government of 18 ministers will cause a problem, and it has one target, which is to deport the second Druze team, and we do not accept a single minister for the Druze community,” wishing Jumblatt not to accept that.
The clerics entered the line of the “Druze knot”, where the media office of Sheikh Nasreddin al-Gharib, (affiliated with Arslan), said that al-Gharib “pursues suspicious projects based on political accusations and goals on the issue of the government to be formed, where, to satisfy their whims, they insist on a government of 18 A minister in which the Druze are represented by one minister, and they reject only the 16 or 20 formulas, because they give a founding component to this entity two ministers.
These were the details of the news The Druze knot brakes the government impulse … Aoun is a... for this day. We hope that we have succeeded by giving you the full details and information. To follow all our news, you can subscribe to the alerts system or to one of our different systems to provide you with all that is new. It is also worth noting that the original news has been published and is available at saudi24news and the editorial team at AlKhaleej Today has confirmed it and it has been modified, and it may have been completely transferred or quoted from it and you can read and follow this news from its main source.

The Hariri government is waiting for someone to push it off...

Nicola Nassif wrote in “Al-Akhbar/Translated by AlKhaleej Today/October 31/2020
When silence is of no use, it is no longer a meaningful weapon. What is often intended is either to conceal progress that needs more to complete and to be careful not to sabotage it, or not at all as if the attempt is still at point zero. This is the contradictory double impression about the stages of government formation between Baabda Palace and Bayt Al Wasat.
Contrary to what was accompanying the formation of the government in the past decade and a half, there were few meetings between the president in charge of the president of the republic, and many of them with the main blocs implicitly partner in the authoring efforts, before reaching his final stage. What is happening now is the opposite: Four meetings between the two presidents in one week without disclosing the extent of the progress that they have made, while there is no public mention, at best, of Prime Minister-designate Saad Hariri’s contact with any of the relevant blocs. In parallel, speculation and speculation abound, without any serious support. Naively, some interpreted the secrecy as restoring the confinement of authorship to the two presidents alone according to their constitutional powers, while others included it – to a certain extent – in the sense that the remainder of the composition in which the basis was accomplished early before the assignment no longer needed only the two presidents.
Information disclosed about this ambiguity and contradictory information from outside the two leaders’ circle:
The first is the final lack of understanding between Hariri and President Michel Aoun over the number of ministers. The first insists on 18 ministers, so that the Druze representation is limited to one seat in which the person delegated by former MP Walid Jumblatt will be appointed, while the second adheres to the government of the Twenty so that the Druze have two seats, one for Jumblatt and the other, MP Talal Arslan’s Aoun promised to give him, and it was said that the promise is the media portfolio, and if they send them Sleeping on silk this promise. The importance of the portfolio does not lie in the amount of significance it aims at, which is the presence of a second Druze partner, the confirmation of his representative presence in the cabinet, and the regulation of the balance of power within it.
The names of the specialists are no longer very important here, since the principle in the negotiation is the distribution of portfolios to the blocs that name their ministers. The distribution of bags among the sects is also insignificant – with the exception of the money bag exception – as the blocs approach their shares as representing their sects as well.
Second, although it is known that communication is completely cut off between Hariri and the leader of the Free Patriotic Movement, MP Gebran Bassil, directly or through intermediaries, maintaining confusion about the Christian share reinforces the belief that Bassil is not absent from the negotiation, deriving his role from Aoun, the actual negotiator for Hariri in Authoring.
This indicates a tangible change in the constitutional mechanism sponsored by Article 53, when the stages of forming the government are divided into three non-overlapping stages, each separate from the other and having their own timing: first of which is the binding consultations to designate an appointed president at the end of which his temporary constitutional entity will be established without having yet to become a speaker of the Council. Ministers, except after issuing a decree signed by the President of the Republic unilaterally. The second is the sole role of the president in charge of conducting consultations and then, in his turn, to draft his government, without the president of the republic having any role at this stage, and if it is necessary for the president-designate to visit him to inform him of those consultations, as the conceptualization is limited to the designated president. The third is when the president-designate carries his draft to the president of the republic, and the role of both becomes equal, what requires them to agree so that the issuance of the authoring decree is linked to their signature, otherwise there is no decree, then the president of the republic has a double role, linked to his approval, amendment, or rejection of the draft in order to accept the signature. Otherwise, the designated president remains assigned or takes the initiative to apologize.
What is happening today contravenes the cycle of Article 53. Before Hariri drafted his draft, it became common that his only negotiator for the Christian share was the President of the Republic who represents himself, the extent of his representation of his party, which constitutes the largest parliamentary bloc and the largest Christian bloc in Parliament. Because Aoun now occupies a dual role, as head of state and concerned with the Christian share, it is no longer important for Basil to be in the form of a juvenile, and he does not necessarily need a reconciliation between him and Hariri. Confirming this, information began to circulate about Christian names being placed in basic portfolios, directly linked to Aoun or Basil, without meaning that they would monopolize the entire Christian share.
Third, some people miss what appears to be a detail in the final stage of composition, very shortly before the issuance of the government decree, and it is not a detail of what has become in the core of the traditions of the game: Before announcing the government formation and printing the three decrees, it is necessary that Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri go to the palace Baabda to review the final version, devoid of the names of the Shiite ministers who personally carried their list with him. He is the one authorized in the name of the Shiite duo to hand over the names to the President of the Republic and the President-designate at this particular time and not before, lest they be subjected once to bargaining and the other to bargaining as names. Thus, their names are visualized as never touched. Such a tradition is neither new nor urgent, nor is it necessarily a formality. It has an additional connotation, which is the existence of a third co-author, the Shiite partner, who is always represented by Berri. Without his moral approval at best, no decrees, because there are no names of Shiite ministers. In the category of acknowledging this tradition, Hariri, like all of his predecessors, fell into line with the third Shiite role in composition. Some remember that Berri was the first to leave the Baabda Palace on February 15, 2014, minutes before the decree of President Tammam Salam’s government was printed, and he supervised the unexpected, unexpected settlement in the last minute by giving the Interior Ministry portfolio to MP Nihad Al-Machnouk and justice to Major General Ashraf Rifi. At the time, the plane that was taking him abroad had turned its engines, waiting for his arrival at the airport.
Hariri finally went further. In advance, before he was commissioned to pay the price of the assignment, he agreed to give the money bag to the Amal Movement and leave naming the Shiite ministers to their reference (Amal Movement and Hezbollah), not to mention his pledge to limit the Druze representation to Jumblatt. The fruit of these two early concessions – the first steps in the ladder of concessions – the Druze leader supported his assignment.
It is not a secret that between October 2019, when he resigned, and October 2020, when he was reassigned, that Hariri climbed the ladder of conditions and concessions over and over again, trying one after another. He inflicted three “victims” on the road, namely, the former minister, Muhammad Safadi, Samir Al-Khatib, and Ambassador Mustafa Adeeb. His victims were the one who nominated it for assignment and then abandoned it, like someone who liked a game and then got bored with it to ask for another. In terms of offering – he is not the third of those – the most precious concessions to the Shiite duo in order to gain access to the Saraya.
Such a performance has become sufficient for him today, even if with a government of specialists, for the other blocs to ask for a privilege similar to, or slightly less, than what was given to the Shiite duo, by naming their ministers. The argument that the president of the republic is armed with first.
These were the details of the news The Hariri government is waiting for someone to push it off... for this day. We hope that we have succeeded by giving you the full details and information. To follow all our news, you can subscribe to the alerts system or to one of our different systems to provide you with all that is new.It is also worth noting that the original news has been published and is available at saudi24news and the editorial team at AlKhaleej Today has confirmed it and it has been modified, and it may have been completely transferred or quoted from it and you can read and follow this news from its main source.
When silence is of no use, it is no longer a meaningful weapon. What is often intended is either to conceal progress that needs more to complete and to be careful not to sabotage it, or not at all as if the attempt is still at point zero. This is the contradictory double impression about the stages of government formation between Baabda Palace and Bayt Al Wasat.
Contrary to what was accompanying the formation of the government in the past decade and a half, there were few meetings between the president in charge of the president of the republic, and many of them with the main blocs implicitly partner in the authoring efforts, before reaching his final stage. What is happening now is the opposite: Four meetings between the two presidents in one week without disclosing the extent of the progress that they have made, while there is no public mention, at best, of Prime Minister-designate Saad Hariri’s contact with any of the relevant blocs. In parallel, speculation and speculation abound, without any serious support. Naively, some interpreted the secrecy as restoring the confinement of authorship to the two presidents alone according to their constitutional powers, while others included it – to a certain extent – in the sense that the remainder of the composition in which the basis was accomplished early before the assignment no longer needed only the two presidents.
Information disclosed about this ambiguity and contradictory information from outside the two leaders’ circle:
The first is the final lack of understanding between Hariri and President Michel Aoun over the number of ministers. The first insists on 18 ministers, so that the Druze representation is limited to one seat in which the person delegated by former MP Walid Jumblatt will be appointed, while the second adheres to the government of the Twenty so that the Druze have two seats, one for Jumblatt and the other, MP Talal Arslan’s Aoun promised to give him, and it was said that the promise is the media portfolio, and if they send them Sleeping on silk this promise. The importance of the portfolio does not lie in the amount of significance it aims at, which is the presence of a second Druze partner, the confirmation of his representative presence in the cabinet, and the regulation of the balance of power within it.
The names of the specialists are no longer very important here, since the principle in the negotiation is the distribution of portfolios to the blocs that name their ministers. The distribution of bags among the sects is also insignificant – with the exception of the money bag exception – as the blocs approach their shares as representing their sects as well.
Second, although it is known that communication is completely cut off between Hariri and the leader of the Free Patriotic Movement, MP Gebran Bassil, directly or through intermediaries, maintaining confusion about the Christian share reinforces the belief that Bassil is not absent from the negotiation, deriving his role from Aoun, the actual negotiator for Hariri in Authoring.
This indicates a tangible change in the constitutional mechanism sponsored by Article 53, when the stages of forming the government are divided into three non-overlapping stages, each separate from the other and having their own timing: first of which is the binding consultations to designate an appointed president at the end of which his temporary constitutional entity will be established without having yet to become a speaker of the Council. Ministers, except after issuing a decree signed by the President of the Republic unilaterally. The second is the sole role of the president in charge of conducting consultations and then, in his turn, to draft his government, without the president of the republic having any role at this stage, and if it is necessary for the president-designate to visit him to inform him of those consultations, as the conceptualization is limited to the designated president. The third is when the president-designate carries his draft to the president of the republic, and the role of both becomes equal, what requires them to agree so that the issuance of the authoring decree is linked to their signature, otherwise there is no decree, then the president of the republic has a double role, linked to his approval, amendment, or rejection of the draft in order to accept the signature. Otherwise, the designated president remains assigned or takes the initiative to apologize.
What is happening today contravenes the cycle of Article 53. Before Hariri drafted his draft, it became common that his only negotiator for the Christian share was the President of the Republic who represents himself, the extent of his representation of his party, which constitutes the largest parliamentary bloc and the largest Christian bloc in Parliament. Because Aoun now occupies a dual role, as head of state and concerned with the Christian share, it is no longer important for Basil to be in the form of a juvenile, and he does not necessarily need a reconciliation between him and Hariri. Confirming this, information began to circulate about Christian names being placed in basic portfolios, directly linked to Aoun or Basil, without meaning that they would monopolize the entire Christian share.
Third, some people miss what appears to be a detail in the final stage of composition, very shortly before the issuance of the government decree, and it is not a detail of what has become in the core of the traditions of the game: Before announcing the government formation and printing the three decrees, it is necessary that Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri go to the palace Baabda to review the final version, devoid of the names of the Shiite ministers who personally carried their list with him. He is the one authorized in the name of the Shiite duo to hand over the names to the President of the Republic and the President-designate at this particular time and not before, lest they be subjected once to bargaining and the other to bargaining as names. Thus, their names are visualized as never touched. Such a tradition is neither new nor urgent, nor is it necessarily a formality. It has an additional connotation, which is the existence of a third co-author, the Shiite partner, who is always represented by Berri. Without his moral approval at best, no decrees, because there are no names of Shiite ministers. In the category of acknowledging this tradition, Hariri, like all of his predecessors, fell into line with the third Shiite role in composition. Some remember that Berri was the first to leave the Baabda Palace on February 15, 2014, minutes before the decree of President Tammam Salam’s government was printed, and he supervised the unexpected, unexpected settlement in the last minute by giving the Interior Ministry portfolio to MP Nihad Al-Machnouk and justice to Major General Ashraf Rifi. At the time, the plane that was taking him abroad had turned its engines, waiting for his arrival at the airport.
Hariri finally went further. In advance, before he was commissioned to pay the price of the assignment, he agreed to give the money bag to the Amal Movement and leave naming the Shiite ministers to their reference (Amal Movement and Hezbollah), not to mention his pledge to limit the Druze representation to Jumblatt. The fruit of these two early concessions – the first steps in the ladder of concessions – the Druze leader supported his assignment.
It is not a secret that between October 2019, when he resigned, and October 2020, when he was reassigned, that Hariri climbed the ladder of conditions and concessions over and over again, trying one after another. He inflicted three “victims” on the road, namely, the former minister, Muhammad Safadi, Samir Al-Khatib, and Ambassador Mustafa Adeeb. His victims were the one who nominated it for assignment and then abandoned it, like someone who liked a game and then got bored with it to ask for another. In terms of offering – he is not the third of those – the most precious concessions to the Shiite duo in order to gain access to the Saraya. Such a performance has become sufficient for him today, even if with a government of specialists, for the other blocs to ask for a privilege similar to, or slightly less, than what was given to the Shiite duo, by naming their ministers. The argument that the president of the republic is armed with first. These were the details of the news The Hariri government is waiting for someone to push it off... for this day. We hope that we have succeeded by giving you the full details and information. To follow all our news, you can subscribe to the alerts system or to one of our different systems to provide you with all that is new. It is also worth noting that the original news has been published and is available at saudi24news and the editorial team at AlKhaleej Today has confirmed it and it has been modified, and it may have been completely transferred or quoted from it and you can read and follow this news from its main source.

 

The Latest English LCCC Miscellaneous Reports And News published on November 01/2020

Orthodox priest shot in Lyon, assailant flees in France’s third attack in two weeks
Arab News/October 31/2020
LYON: A Greek Orthodox priest was shot and injured on Saturday at a church in the centre of the French city of Lyon by an assailant who then fled, a police source and witnesses said. The priest was fired on twice at around 4 p.m. (1500 GMT) as he was closing the church, and he was being treated on site for life-threatening injuries, the source said. Witnesses said the church was Greek Orthodox. Another police source said the priest was of Greek nationality, and had been able to tell emergency services as they arrived that he had not recognised his assailant. The incident came two days after a man shouting "Allahu Akbar!" (God is the Greatest) beheaded a woman and killed two other people in a church in Nice. Two weeks ago, a schoolteacher in a Paris suburb was beheaded by an 18-year-old attacker who was apparently incensed by the teacher showing a cartoon of the Prophet Muhammad during a class.
While the motive for Saturday's attack was not known, government ministers had warned that there could be other Islamist militant attacks. President Emmanuel Macron has deployed thousands of soldiers to protect sites such as places of worship and schools.
Prime Minister Jean Castex, who was visiting Rouen, said he was heading back to Paris to assess the situation. The Nice attack took place on the day Muslims celebrate the Prophet Mohammad's birthday. Many Muslims around the world have been angered about France's defence of the right to publish cartoons depicting the Prophet. A third person has been taken into police custody in connection with that attack, a police source said on Saturday. The suspected assailant was shot by police and remained in critical condition in hospital. Macron took to Arabic-language airwaves on Saturday, saying he understood the publication of cartoons depicting the Prophet Muhammad may shock some people but that there was no justification for acts of violence."I understand and I respect the fact that people might be shocked by these caricatures, but I will never accept any justification for acts of violence over these caricatures," Macron said. The teacher killed on Oct. 16, Samuel Paty, had showed cartoons in class to prompt discussion of free speech.

 

Macron Says Can 'Understand' Shock of Cartoons
Agence France Presse/October 31/2020
President Emmanuel Macron said that he could understand if Muslims were shocked by cartoons of the prophet Mohammed, as French authorities on Saturday sought to ascertain if a young Tunisian suspected of killing three people in a knife rampage inside a Nice church had outside help. France is on edge after the republication in early September of cartoons of the prophet Mohammed by the Charlie Hebdo weekly, which was followed by an attack outside its former offices, the beheading of a teacher and now the attack in Nice. Macron sparked protests in the Muslim world after the murder earlier this month of teacher Samuel Paty -- who had shown his class a cartoon of Mohammed -- by saying France would never renounce its right to caricature. But in an apparent bid to reach out to Muslims, Macron gave a long interview setting out his vision to Qatar-based TV channel Al-Jazeera, seeking to strike a softer tone. "I can understand that people could be shocked by the caricatures but I will never accept that violence can be justified," he said. "I consider it our duty to protect our freedoms and our rights," he added in an extract of the interview to be broadcast from 1600 GMT.
- 'Too early to say' -
France is still reeling from the latest attack in Nice which Macron has already described as "Islamist" terror. Brahim Issaoui, 21, only arrived in Europe from Tunisia last month and, according to prosecutors, killed the sexton, a Brazilian woman and a French woman in the attack in the Notre-Dame Basilica on Thursday morning. The attacker cut the throat of Nadine Devillers, 60, and the sexton Vincent Loques, 55. A Brazilian mother, Simone Barreto Silva, who was stabbed several times, took refuge in a nearby restaurant but died of her wounds there. Issaoui was shot by police multiple times and is currently in a grave condition in hospital. Investigators have been unable to question him and his precise motivations remain unclear. "It is still too early to say if there were others complicit, what his motivations were in coming to France and when this idea took root in him," said a source close to the inquiry who asked not to be named. Investigators believe Issaoui arrived illegally in Europe on Italy's Mediterranean island of Lampedusa on September 20. He then arrived at the mainland Italian port of Bari on October 9 before coming to Nice just one or two days before the attack. French police are currently holding three people for questioning in the investigation, which is focusing on two telephones found on the suspect after the attack. A first man, 47, was detained on Thursday evening after being seen next to the attacker on surveillance footage the day before the attack. The second individual, suspected of contacting Issaoui the day before the attack, was held on Friday. Police said Saturday a third man, aged 33, was arrested after being present when the home of the second suspect was raided.
- Global threat to France -
The attack came with France still in shock over the October 16 beheading of teacher Paty by a suspected Islamist radical from Russia's region of Chechnya. The teacher had shown a class a cartoon of the prophet Mohammed in the wake of the controversy generated by the reprinting by satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo of the caricatures to mark the beginning of the trial of suspects over the massacre of its staff in January 2015. Even before that attack, Macron had promised a tough new campaign against Islamist radicalism which had aroused controversy and condemnation from Muslims around the world. Protests erupted Friday in Afghanistan, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Mali, Mauritania and Lebanon, the latest in a string of mass rallies denouncing France. Indonesian President Joko Widodo on Saturday "strongly condemned" Macron's defence of the right to publish such cartoons. Foreign Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian warned that French citizens face a security risk "wherever they are" in the wake of the attack, saying alerts had been sent to all French nationals abroad. In Issaoui's hometown of Sfax in central Tunisia, his family told AFP they struggled to believe he had carried out the attack but relatives said he had turned to religion and isolated himself in the past two years.
 

The Nice attacker’s journey from illegal migrant to terrorist
The Arab Weekly/October 31/2020
TUNIS--Nothing was to suggest that Brahim Aouissaoui, a 21-year old man from a large and poor family, would turn his fate from being an illegal immigrant looking to for a better life in France to a suspect in a terrorist attack. Politicians and experts in Islamic extremist groups say that the social and economic crisis following Tunisia's 2011 uprising has created an environment conducive to transforming young people searching for a decent living into desperate people who can easily be recruited by extremists and criminals of all kinds.
Brahim Aouissaoui was just one of the many illegal migrants jumping on the adventure of crossing over to Italy. Sources said he had arrived about a month ago on the Italian island of Lampedusa coming from the governorate of Sfax in Tunisia. After quarantining, he was told to move on and that’s he ended up in the city of Nice on the eve of his heinous attack.
His family said that he had turned to religion about two years ago, but he did not display any extremist ideas or stances. “Two and a half years ago, Brahim started praying. He became a loner moving only between work, mosque and home. He had no acquaintances,” his grief-stricken mother, Gamra, said.
“Before that, he used to drink and do drugs. I used to ask why he was wasting his money when we are in need, and he would answer ‘If God guides me, He will guide me for myself,” She added. Brahim tried to immigrate illegally several times before until he succeeded about a month and a half ago. When he arrived in Lampedusa, he told his family he was working picking olives, according to his brother. Brahim told his family he had arrived in France on Wednesday to look for work. According to his sister Afef, her brother went to a building opposite Notre Dame Basilica upon his arrival in Nice on Thursday morning to sleep, and that he showed them the area.
Brahim’s mother and sister were in shock from the horror of what he did, while they were answering questions from the press in their modest home in Tunisia. “When he dropped out of school, he worked in a motorcycle repair shop,” his mother related. “he was able to save between 1100 and 1200 dinars (about 400 euros) and has set up a booth to sell (bootlegged) gasoline,” like many young people in the region who were earning a living from such an illegal project. The Nice attack perpetrator was born in a family of seven girls and three boys, living in a poor neighbourhood, with practically no existing infrastructure, near an industrial zone in the Sfax governorate. Analysts and sociologists say that social conditions such as those where Brahim Aouissaoui was living represent the perfect hunting ground for Islamist militant groups. A few years back, these groups would target the young men and women living in such conditions, brainwash them with their radical ideologies and send them to conflict zones in Syria and Libya. The groups were particularly active in the poor regions of the interior of the country, where they were able to recruit and train a sizeable number of desperate young men to carry out terrorist operations against the security forces and the army in Tunisia, while taking refuge in the mountains in the back-country.
Analysts point out that the difficult economic situation in the country is pushing many young people to despair and making them resort to suicide, illegal migration or joining militant groups. They say that the incessant politicians’ squabbles and disagreements while riding on the bandwagon of decrying these desperate conditions, have done nothing but exacerbate these conditions. Tunisian youth had high hopes of the 2011 uprising, but the dismal results of the last ten years led to more than disillusionment. The Tunisian judiciary began investigating the family of the suspect in the Nice attack. The public prosecutor at the lower court of Tunis, Mohsen Daly, said that the suspect “was not classified as a terrorist with the Tunisian authorities and left the country illegally on September 14, and has judicial precedents in acts of violence and drugs.” Mazen Cherif, a Tunisian specialist of terrorist groups, highlighted the role of terrorist groups that always exploit to their advantage situations of deteriorating social and economic conditions and insecurity in the country, as well as the role of inciting discourse coming from some religious clerics. Cherif told The Arab Weekly that the bad situation has not resulted from just radical discourse, but also from the existence of a moral and religious vacuum, coupled with frustration, trauma, poverty and despair. All of these factors transformed the country into something like a prison in the eyes of these desperate young men and created false alternatives for them.
For his part, Zouheir Maghzaoui, Secretary-General of the People’s Movement (pan-Arabist party), said, “The causes are many, including the state of general frustration that the takfirist groups exploit in their activities.” He also admitted that “violent and anger-charged political discourse serves the interests of terrorists.”Talking to The Arab Weekly, Maghzaoui said, “The political crisis has also cast its shadow—in terms of rhetoric, social media, demonisation and hatred—on the climate of justifying terrorism and creating a political cover for it.”Successive governments since 2011 have been accused of having focused on the process of political transition by ensuring the success of three major electoral episodes, but failed to address the economic and social issues, which prompted thousands of people to venture into illegal immigration, leading to the death by drowning of some, while the fate of many others is still unknown. Those who had made it to Europe continue to live under the threat of deportation because of their illegal status. The so-called “death boats” of illegal migration continue to plough the waters of the Mediterranean between the Tunisian coast and Europe, and the local authorities continue to arrest candidates for illegal migration almost daily. Statistics of the Tunisian Ministry of the Interior show that since the beginning of this year until mid-September, 8581 people tried to cross Tunisian waters towards European coasts, including 2104 foreign nationals.

 

Russia Pledges Help to Yerevan if Fighting Reaches Armenia
Agence France Presse/October 31/2020
Russia said Saturday it would provide "necessary" assistance to Yerevan in its conflict with Azerbaijan if fighting reached Armenian territory after its ally requested help. Earlier Saturday Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan formally asked Russian President Vladimir Putin to begin "urgent" consultations on security assistance in its conflict with Azerbaijan over the breakaway region of Nagorno-Karabakh. Pasninyan sent the letter to Putin after Armenia and Azerbaijan failed to agree a fresh ceasefire during talks in Geneva on Friday, as fighting continued overnight and Saturday.
The announcements further raised fears of an escalation in fighting between Armenia and Azerbaijan. Some observers are concerned it risks sucking Yerevan's ally Russia, and Turkey, which backs Baku, into the decades-long conflict. Armenia and Azerbaijan have been engaged in fierce fighting for more than a month over Nagorno-Karabakh, a region of Azerbaijan controlled by Armenian separatists in the wake of the break-up of the Soviet Union.
The flare-up has left more than a thousand dead, with world powers so far unable to persuade either side to stop fighting.  Russia has a military base in Armenia's second-largest city of Gyumri and has a defence treaty with Yerevan. Moscow, which has previously said that its defence pact with Armenia does not extend to the breakaway region of Nagorno-Karabakh, reiterated that help would be provided if the fighting expanded. "Russia will render Yerevan all necessary assistance if clashes take place directly on the territory of Armenia," the foreign ministry said.
At the same, time Russian foreign ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova said in televised remarks "concrete formats" of assistance to Armenia would be discussed. The Russian foreign ministry also called on the warring sides to immediately cease fire, de-escalate tensions and begin "substantive" talks. Pashinyan in his letter to Putin said that hostilities were getting closer to Armenia's borders and reiterated that Azerbaijan's ally Turkey was backing Baku, the foreign ministry said. "The prime minister of Armenia has asked the Russian president to begin urgent consultations with the aim of determining the kind and amount of aid which the Russian Federation can provide Armenia to ensure its security," the ministry said in a statement. Pashinyan requested Moscow's help, invoking the two countries' close ties and a 1997 treaty on friendship, cooperation and mutual assistance.
- 'Impossible to calculate risks' -
Carey Cavanaugh, a former US ambassador and co-chair of the OSCE Minsk group, said Putin was aware that expanded military engagement in the conflict was not in Moscow's interest. "It is impossible to calculate the risk, but injection of either Russian or Turkish armed forces at this point would mark a significant escalation of the conflict," Cavanaugh, a professor of diplomacy at the University of Kentucky, told AFP. At the same time, he said, "Russia could move some forces out of barracks in Gyumri to enhance border protection (they already cooperate on that) or to assist with any outflow of displaced civilian population fleeing from the fighting." Hikmet Hajiyev, an aide to the Azerbaijani president, told AFP that Baku would not comment. On Friday, mediators from France, Russia and the US said in a statement from Geneva that the warring sides had committed to "not deliberately target civilian populations or non-military objects in accordance with international humanitarian law". But the defence ministry of the Karabakh separatist leadership on Saturday accused Azerbaijan of violating the Geneva agreements and targeting the main city Stepanakert and the strategically important town of Shusha.
The ministry said there were "wounded among civilians" in Shusha. Baku denied targeting the main city in Karabakh. Azerbaijan and Armenia have been locked in a bitter conflict over Karabakh since Armenian separatists backed by Yerevan seized control of the mountainous province in a 1990s war that left 30,000 people dead. The current clashes broke out on September 27 and fighting has persisted despite repeated international attempts to secure a ceasefire. The warring sides have three times agreed to ceasefires during recent talks mediated by Russia, France and the United States but the truces have all quickly fallen apart. More than 1,200 people from both sides have been reported dead since the fighting began but the actual death toll is believed to be substantially higher.
 

Satellite photos show new construction at Iranian nuclear site
DEBKAFile/October 31/2020
Iran is shown actively building a new facility for advanced centrifuge production at the Natanz nuclear center – this one underground – to replace the plant destroyed in an explosion last summer. Satellite images released on Wednesday, Oct. 28, by the San-Francisco-based Planet Labs, show a road going into the mountains south of Natanz to an apparent structure, most likely a tunnel in the mountains. The sabotaged facility was manufacturing high-speed centrifuges to accelerate the enrichment of high-grade uranium for nuclear fuel. The explosion at Natanz substantially set this project back. Iran is clearly embarked on sinking its most sensitive nuclear facilities underground as a safeguard against sabotage. While slowing down direct military tensions with the Washington until the winner of the US presidential election emerges, Tehran is busy on the quiet updating and advancing its nuclear program.


Iranian Arab opposition group says Iran abducted former leader in Turkey
Yaghoub Fazeli, Al Arabiya English/Saturday 31 October 2020
An Iranian Arab opposition group accused on Friday the Iranian regime of abducting one of its former leaders in Turkey. The Arab Struggle Movement for the Liberation of Ahwaz (ASMLA), an Iranian-Arab separatist group, said in a statement that Iranian intelligence agents abducted Habib Chaab – also known as Habib Eseywed – after “luring” him to Turkey. ASMLA said a Gulf state aided in the abduction of Chaab. The group, however, did not specify which country. Activists say Ankara has deported dozens of Iranian activists and asylum seekers. The Kurdistan Human Rights Network says Turkey deported 33 Iranian Kurdish activists to Tehran last December. Iran, which considers ASMLA a terrorist organisation, is yet to comment on the matter. The Arab nationalist group seeks a separate state inside Iran’s oil-rich southwestern Khuzestan province. Ahwazi Arabs say they are deprived of decent living standards and civil rights, as well as facing discrimination due to their Arab identity. Some see themselves as under Persian occupation and want independence or autonomy. In 2017, Ahmad Mola Nissi, ASMLA’s founder, was shot dead in the Netherlands. A year later, Iran accused the group of being responsible for a deadly attack on a military parade in Ahwaz that killed 25 people. AMSLA denies the accusation. In recent years, a number of Iranian dissidents have been arrested in neighbouring countries and taken to Iran. In August, Iran said it arrested US-based opposition figure Jamshid Sharmahd. Details of his arrest and subsequent travel to Iran remain a mystery. Last year, Iran announced the arrest of Iranian journalist-turned-activist Ruhollah Zam. Last October, Iran’s Revolutionary Guards (IRGC) said they had “trapped” Zam, who had been given political asylum in France and was also based in other parts of Europe, in a “complex operation using intelligence deception.”He was sentenced to death in June for allegedly fuelling anti-government unrest in late 2017 on social media, according to Iranian media.

 

Instagram removes Khamenei’s French account after Nice attack
Yaghoub Fazeli, Al Arabiya English/Saturday 31 October 2020
Instagram temporarily removed and later restored the French account of Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei on the social media platform on Friday, a day after a knife-wielding man killed three people at a church in the French city of Nice.
A Tunisian man armed with a knife shouting “Allahu Akbar” (God is Greatest) beheaded a woman and killed two others in a church in the Mediterranean city of Nice on Thursday before being arrested. A day before the attack, Khamenei had published a message addressed to “young” French people on his numerous social media accounts, including his French Twitter and Instagram accounts, urging them to ask President Emmanuel Macron “why he supports insulting God’s Messenger (Prophet Muhammad) in the name of freedom of expression.”Macron had defended the publication of cartoons depicting the Prophet Muhammad last week, saying France “will not give up cartoons.”His remarks came after a French history teacher who had shown cartoons of Prophet Muhammad during a discussion about free speech was beheaded near Paris earlier this month. “Does freedom of expression mean insulting, especially a sacred personage? Isn’t this stupid act an insult to the reason of the ppl who elected him?” Khamenei’s message read. Khamenei, who has publicly referred to the Holocaust as a “myth” in the past, continued: “The next question to ask is: why is it a crime to raise doubts about the Holocaust? Why should anyone who writes about such doubts be imprisoned while insulting the Prophet (pbuh) is allowed?” Instagram removed Khamenei’s French account for a few hours on Friday and later restored it after the post was deleted. The supreme leader’s other Instagram accounts – including his English, Arabic and Persian accounts where the post has not yet been deleted – have remained unblocked. Instagram is the only major social media platform that is not banned in Iran.


Armenia, Azerbaijan Trade Fresh Accusations of Karabakh Attacks
Asharq Al-Awsat/Saturday, 31 October, 2020
Armenia and Azerbaijan once more accused each other of bombing residential areas on Saturday, in defiance of a pact to avoid the deliberate targeting of civilians in and around the mountain enclave of Nagorno-Karabakh. Shelling was reported by both sides within hours of the latest agreement to defuse the conflict, reached after talks in Geneva between the two countries’ foreign ministers and envoys from France, Russia and the United States. The agreement with the co-chairs of the OSCE Minsk Group fell short of what would have been a fourth ceasefire since fighting began on Sept. 27. The death toll in the worst fighting in the South Caucasus for more than 25 years has surpassed 1,000 and is possibly much higher. Nagorno-Karabakh is internationally recognized as part of Azerbaijan, but is populated and controlled by ethnic Armenians. About 30,000 people were killed in a 1991-94 war in the region.
The Nagorno-Karabakh Emergency and Rescue Service said the central market in Stepanakert, the enclave’s largest city, had come under fire and that large parts of it had been burned. Shushan Stepanyan, spokeswoman for the Armenian defense ministry, also said several civilians had been wounded in attacks on the strategic city of Shushi, 15 km (9 miles) to the south of Stepanakert. Azerbaijan’s defense ministry denied both accusations. It said that the regions of Terter, Aghdam and Aghjabedi had come under artillery fire, as had Gubadli, a town between the enclave and the Iranian border that was taken by Azeri troops this week. More than 1,000 fighters from the Nagorno-Karabakh army have been killed. Azerbaijan has not disclosed its military casualties, while Russia has estimated as many as 5,000 deaths on both sides. Three ceasefires have failed to halt the fighting, the most recent brokered in Washington last Sunday by US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo. The OSCE Minsk Group said Armenia and Azerbaijan had also agreed to exchange the bodies of fighters and to provide within a week lists of detained prisoners of war, with the aim of an eventual exchange.
 

Sudan signs agreement with US restoring its sovereign immunity
Reuters/Saturday 31 October 2020
Sudan and the United States signed an agreement to restore the African country's sovereign immunity, the Sudanese Ministry of Justice said on Friday. The ministry said in a statement the agreement will settle cases brought against Sudan in US courts, including for the bombing of US embassies in Kenya and Tanzania in 1998, for which Sudan has agreed to pay $335 million to victims. The deal is part of a US pledge to remove Sudan from its designation as a state sponsor of terrorism, which goes back to its toppled Islamist ruler Omar al-Bashir when Washington believed the country was supporting militant groups. President Donald Trump said this month that the United States will remove Sudan from the list as soon as Khartoum sets aside the $335 million it has agreed to pay to American victims of militant attacks and their families. To avoid new lawsuits Sudan needed its sovereign immunity restored, which it lost as a designated sponsor of terrorism. The designation makes it difficult for its transitional government to access urgently needed debt relief and foreign financing as it fights an economic crisis. Sudan has under US pressure also agreed to normalize ties with Israel, making Khartoum the third Arab government after the United Arab Emirates and Bahrain to establish relations with Israel in the last two months.

 

Sudan: Deal with US blocks further compensation claims being filed against us
The Associated Press/Saturday 31 October 2020
Sudan says it has signed an agreement with the US that could effectively stop any future compensation claims being filed against the African country in US courts, following Washington's decision to remove the country from its list of state sponsors of terrorism. The deal restores in US courts what is known as sovereign immunity to the Sudanese government, and comes after a year of negotiations between the Trump administration and Sudan's new leadership, the Sudanese Justice Ministry said. A transitional government led by a mix of military and civilian figures currently rules Sudan, after the overthrow of former leader Omar al-Bashir in April 2019 led to the country seeking better ties with the US. Sudanese Justice Minister Nasredeen Abdulbari said that the agreement will allow Sudan “to resolve historical liabilities, restore normal relations with the United States, and move forward toward democracy and better economic times.” The ministry said the deal, signed at the US State Department Friday, was meant to settle all lawsuits against Sudan in American courts, including those related to the 1998 bombings of the US embassies in Kenya and Tanzania. The deal would enter into force after US Congress passes legislation needed to implement the agreement. Sudan’s transitional government has agreed to pay $335 million in compensation for victims of the attacks that were carried out by Osama bin Laden’s al-Qaida network while the militant leader was living in Sudan. The ministry said the money would be held in an escrow account till the US finalizes the restoration of Sudan’s sovereign immunity. The State Department has notified Congress of the agreement, which it described as a “monumental win for victims of terrorism.”It said the deal also included compensation settlement for victims of the deadly 2000 bombing of the USS Cole at Yemen’s southern port of Aden which killed 17 Marines, and for the killing of John Granville, an official with the US Agency for International Development, who was killed in a drive-by shooting in the Sudanese capital of Khartoum in 2008. “The signing .. marks a critically important step toward achieving justice for the tragedy our families,” said Edith L. Bartley, spokeswoman for the families of the Americans killed in the Kenya attack.Bartley urged US Congress to “immediately” pass legislation needed to implement the settlement and release the money. The US designation of Sudan as a state sponsor of terrorism dates back to the 1990s, when al-Bashir ruled Sudan and his government briefly hosted bin Laden and other wanted militants. Sudan was also believed to have served as a pipeline for Iran to supply weapons to Palestinian militants in the Gaza Strip. De-listing Sudan from the blacklist was part of the US administration's efforts to have Sudan normalize its ties with Israel. Sudan has become the third Arab country — after the United Arab Emirates and Bahrain — to normalize ties with the Jewish state in the run-up to Election Day on Nov. 3. Sudanese transitional authorities have promised by hold elections by 2022.


Fayez Al-Sarraj announces his retreat from the presidency of the Libyan...
Translated by AlKhaleej Today/October 31/2020
The head of the Libyan Government of National Accord, Fayez Al-Sarraj, announced today, Friday, that he has withdrawn his resignation decision, which he would have implemented at the end of this month. Al-Sarraj reasoned his retreat by saying that it comes in response to demands for his continuation in his post, according to a statement by his spokesman, which Sputnik obtained a copy of. In mid-September, Al-Sarraj announced his intention to hand over his duties to the new executive committee that is working to form the dialogue committee, no later than the end of this October.
On Thursday, the Libyan Supreme Council of State, which is loyal to the Tripoli government, asked Al-Sarraj to continue in his position and postpone his decision to hand over power until a new presidential council is chosen. These were the details of the news Fayez Al-Sarraj announces his retreat from the presidency of the Libyan... for this day. We hope that we have succeeded by giving you the full details and information. To follow all our news, you can subscribe to the alerts system or to one of our different systems to provide you with all that is new. It is also worth noting that the original news has been published and is available at eg24.news and the editorial team at AlKhaleej Today has confirmed it and it has been modified, and it may have been completely transferred or quoted from it and you can read and follow this news from its main source.

 

Canada warns against Turkish breaches of arms sales agreements
The Arab Weekly/October 31/2020
OTTAWA - A Turkish-made military drone shot down by Armenia in the conflict with Azerbaijan was equipped with Canadian imaging and targeting systems, Canadian daily The Globe and Mail said on Friday. Canada suspended arms exports to Turkey in early October as it investigates the possible diversion of restricted Canadian military equipment to Azerbaijan. At a news conference, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau pointed to possible breaches of arms sales agreements. “We need to make sure that the rules and the agreements that were in place on the contract for use (of Canadian arms) are being respected,” he said.
“We heard that there were concerns that they were not, and indeed we continue to see examples and evidence that they possibly were not.” Turkey has blasted Ottawa over its suspension of arms shipments to a NATO ally. Ankara is backing its longtime ally Azerbaijan in fighting over Nagorno-Karabakh, an ethnic Armenian province that broke away from Azerbaijan in a bitterly fought war in the 1990s. Photos of parts of the downed drone were taken Thursday by a photographer from The Globe and Mail dispatched to an Armenian military complex. Arms exports researcher Kelsey Gallagher was quoted by the Canadian daily as saying the photos clearly show an MX-15D imaging and targeting device made by Canadian company L3Harris Wescam. “While we know this is a Wescam sensor just by looking at the turret itself, the inclusion of ‘CMX-15D’ on the serial code of the base plate makes it irrefutable this is Canadian-made hardware,” he said. “The same base plate is also branded with ‘Baykar,’ the manufacturer of the Turkish Bayraktar TB2 drone.”Trudeau renewed calls for de-escalation, respect for ceasefires and a negotiated solution to the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.
Canada suspended the export of some drone technology to Turkey earlier this month as it probes allegations the equipment was used by Azeri forces involved in fighting with Armenia. Turkey’s military exports to its ally Azerbaijan have risen six-fold this year, with sales of drones and other military equipment rising to $77 million last month alone before fighting broke out over the Nagorno-Karabakh region, according to exports data.

 

Iraq reopens Tahrir square, epicenter of anti-government protests in Baghdad
AFP/Saturday 31 October 2020
Iraqi authorities reopened Baghdad’s Tahrir Square and Al-Jumhuriyah bridge on Saturday, symbolically ending more than a year of demonstrations in epicenters of an anti-government protest movement. Protester tents have been dismantled at the Tahrir roundabout, now again circled by cars, and the towering concrete walls used to close off the Al-Jumhuriyah bridge across the Tigris River have been removed. Tahrir Square and its massive Freedom Monument was at the heart of the movement that brought together hundreds of thousands of Iraqis in October 2019, paralyzing the capital and southern Iraq for months.
The Al-Jumhuriyah bridge leading to the highly fortified Green Zone – where government offices, parliament and the US embassy are housed – was a hotspot of clashes during the protests. Clashes with security forces during the revolt left around 600 people dead and 30,000 wounded, the vast majority demonstrators. “The reopening of these places does not mean the revolt is over,” said Kamal Jabar, one of the figures of the movement dubbed the “October Revolution.”“The protesters have lost a battle, but the movement endures and is now working to set up political organizations,” he told AFP.
The movement had called for jobs, basic services, a total overhaul of the ruling class and an end to corruption. But it lost momentum and then ground to a halt in the spring due to an outbreak of tensions between arch-foes the United States and Iran on Iraqi soil and the COVID-19 pandemic.
The protests helped usher in Prime Minister Mustafa al-Kadhimi in May, but he has yet to deliver on any major reforms. Lockdown measures imposed to stem the virus and the fall in oil prices precipitated Iraq’s tumble into its worst economic downturn and doubled the country’s poverty rate to 40 percent. Amid the crisis, public pressure mounted to reopen Tahrir Square and Al-Jumhuriyah bridge to ease traffic in Baghdad - a city of 10 million inhabitants - and to revive trade in the center of the Arab world’s second most populated capital.

 

At least three killed, 51 injured in southern Iraq blast targeting pipeline
Reuters, Basra/Saturday 31 October 2020
At least three people were killed and more than 50 injured in a gas pipeline explosion in southern Iraq, police sources said on Saturday. The military said in a statement that the cause of the blast was not known. It said nine Shia militia fighters were among the wounded and two children had been killed. Police sources said the blast, near the southern city of Samawa, 270 km (170 miles) south of Baghdad, occurred along a stretch of pipeline that goes near a militia camp. Gas officials said the pipe there had seen leaks in the past. Firefighters managed to contain the fire after shutting down the gas line, police said. The oil ministry said in a statement it had sent technical crews to repair the damaged section. Gas flows would resume in the “next hours” via an alternative pipeline, to avoid shortages of supplies to power stations. An investigation was launched to determine cause of blast, the statement cited Deputy Oil Minister Hamid Younis as saying. Iraqi energy officials said the domestic line transports gas from some of the southern fields to feed power stations in some southern cities and a key power station near Baghdad. The explosion has no effect on Iraq’s gas production and processing operations, two gas officials said.

 

Iraq Kurdish ex-governor wanted for corruption dies in US
AFP/Saturday 31 October 2020
Former Kirkuk governor Najmeddin Karim, who was forced to quit for organizing a referendum in defiance of Iraq’s federal government and wanted for corruption, died on Saturday, his family said. Aged 71, Karim passed away at dawn in a hospital in the United States. He held both Iraqi and US citizenship. He would be buried in Iraqi Kurdistan, said the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK) of which he was once a member. Kirkuk is one of several regions that Kurdish peshmerga fighters took over in 2014 as extremists from ISIS terrorist group swept through much of northern and western Iraq. Angered by the 2017 referendum for independence from Iraq, Baghdad deployed federal forces and retook the oil-rich province in October 2017. Karim had organized the referendum in Kirkuk in defiance of the federal government and had also taken to the airwaves to call people to arms against federal forces. Days before the referendum was held across the autonomous Kurdish region in northern Iraq, federal authorities had fired Karim from the governorship.Karim, who had defied the order to step down and raised the Kurdish flag on Kirkuk’s official building, fled after federal forces took control of Kirkuk. Oil is the lifeblood of the economy in Iraq which relies on crude sales to fund around 90 percent of its budget. But the country, one of the most corrupt in the world, has lost billions of state funds since 2003, representing almost three times its budget and twice its gross domestic product.

 

For Justin Trudeau “freedom of expression has its limits”
Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau defended freedom of expression on Friday while believing that it was “not without limits“and should not”injure arbitrarily and needlessly“some communities. “We will always defend freedom of speech“said Mr. Trudeau, in response to a question about the right to caricature the Prophet Muhammad, as did the magazine Charlie Hebdo.”But freedom of expression is not without limits“, he argued at a press conference.”We owe it to ourselves to act with respect for others and to seek not to arbitrarily or needlessly harm those with whom we are sharing a society and a planet.“.“We are not allowed, for example, to cry fire in a crowded cinema, there are always limits“, argued the head of government. Distancing himself from the position of French President Emmanuel Macron, Mr. Trudeau pleaded for use “prudent“freedom of speech.”In a pluralistic, diverse and respectful society like ours, we owe it to ourselves to be aware of the impact of our words, our actions on others, particularly these communities and populations who still experience a lot of discrimination.“, he pleaded. As he had done the day before with the leaders of the European Union, Mr. Trudeau wanted to condemn the recent terrorist attacks “awful and dreadful” in France. “It is unjustifiable and Canada wholeheartedly condemns these acts while always standing with our French friends who are going through extremely difficult times.“, he insisted.

 

Damascus Raises Price of Bread
Damascus - London/ Asharq Al-Awsat/Saturday, 31 October, 2020 -
The Syrian government increased on Thursday the price of bread in regime-controlled areas, while several bakeries in the countryside of Damascus stopped operating over a fuel and flour crisis. The Syrian official news agency, SANA, reported that the Ministry of Internal Trade and Consumer Protection issued a decision setting the sale price of 1kg of “subsidized bread” without bag at 75 Syrian liras and the price of 1.1kg bundle of bread packed in a plastic bag at 100 liras. Before the decision, the 1kg of subsidized bread was sold at 35 liras while the bundle of bread was 50 liras. The Ministry justified its decision to "high costs and difficulties in securing wheat flour as a result of the conditions of war and the unjust blockade.” The US dollar is worth around 2,200 Syrian liras in the black market. The bread crisis drove state-owned bakeries in Damascus to place people, queuing for bread, in iron cages. The director of Damascus bakeries, Nael Asmander, was quoted as saying that this is the way to separate men, women and army soldiers, adding that the “culture of queuing does not exist in our country.”Last month, the Syrian government tried in vain to solve the bread crisis by ordering that daily family bread rations be reduced after failing to provide subsidized bread and gasoline to the people. The move sparked outrage among the public, who accused Damascus of “starving” the people to cover up for its shortcomings. SANA announced a new mechanism for people to buy bread. A family of one or two people will be allowed one pack of bread per day, while a family of three or four will be allowed two. A family of five or six can have access to three packs and a family of seven or more will be allowed four. Prime Minister Hussein Arnous said this week that “bread is a red line.”At a meeting with unions, the PM said that 690,000 tons of wheat had been bought this year, including 300,000 from Hasakah in northeast Syria. Damascus has sharply increased petrol prices in regime-held areas, blaming the decision on "the huge cost of the government in securing oil derivatives and the increase in transport costs in light of the unjust blockade imposed by the US administration.”

UN Security Council Extends Mandate of MINURSO for a Year
London - Hatem Betioui/ Asharq Al-Awsat/Saturday, 31 October, 2020 -
The Security Council extended the mandate of the United Nations Mission for the Referendum in Western Sahara (MINURSO) for one year, indicating that it looks forward to appointing a new envoy after the resignation of Horst Kohler. The voting results were announced by videoconferencing as the Security Council was not able to convene after members of the Niger delegation contracted the coronavirus. The Council expressed its full support for the ongoing efforts of the Secretary-General and his incoming personal envoy to sustain the renewed negotiations process. The Council noted the intention of the Kohler to invite Morocco, the Frente Polisario, Algeria and Mauritania to meet again, and welcomed the commitment of those parties to remain engaged throughout the process in order to ensure a successful outcome. The Council commended Kohler who resigned for health reasons on May 22, 2019, lauding his efforts in convening the roundtable discussions which created a new momentum in the political process. It reaffirmed its commitment to assist the parties in achieving a just, lasting and mutually acceptable political solution. In calling for the resumption of negotiations, the Council asked the parties to take into account the efforts made since 2006, as well as subsequent developments, aiming to reach a solution accepted by Morocco and the Polisario. It invited Member States to lend appropriate assistance to such talks. The Security Council took note of the Moroccan proposal submitted to the UN Secretary-General on April 11, 2007, and welcomed the serious and credible Moroccan efforts to advance the process towards a solution. Informed sources told Asharq Al-Awsat that this paragraph of the report was drawn up by the US, in confirmation of Washington's support for Morocco’s Autonomy Plan for Western Sahara.
“Reaffirming the need to fully respect military agreements previously reached with MINURSO regarding a ceasefire,” the Council also called upon the parties to fully adhere to those agreements, and refrain from any actions that could undermine negotiations or further destabilize the situation in Western Sahara.
The Council also took note of the commitments made by the Polisario Front to the former envoy. It welcomed the assessment of the UN Secretary-General, which indicated that the situation in the Sahara remained relatively calm as parties continued to respect the ceasefire and MINURSO’s tasks.
The Security Council encouraged the two parties to increase cooperation with the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) in identifying and implementing confidence-building measures necessary for the success of the political process.
It stressed the importance of improving the human rights situation in the Sahara and the Tindouf camps, in southwestern Algeria. The Council encouraged the parties to work with the international community to develop and implement independent and credible measures to ensure full respect for human rights, taking into account their relevant obligations under international law. The Security Council strongly encouraged the parties to enhance cooperation with the UNHCR by facilitating its visits to the region. The Council noted with great concern the difficulties faced by Sahrawi refugees and their dependence on humanitarian assistance. It also noted with deep concerns the insufficient funding for those living in the camps and the risks associated with reducing food assistance.
 

The Latest LCCC English analysis & editorials from miscellaneous sources published on November 01/2020

The Choice Between Trump and Obama Foreign Policies
Sarah N. Stern/American Thinker/October 31, 2020
A new book by Dr. Walid Phares, titled The Choice: Trump vs Obama Biden in US Foreign Policy is getting attention in Washington, D.C. and around the world. Released in late September, it stands alone as a definitive discussion and analysis of foreign policy and national security within a loud and crucial presidential election season which seems determined to focus only on domestic issues, personas, and inflammatory accusations.
In The Choice, Phares examines the shifts in foreign policy that occurred during the Obama-Biden administration between 2009 and 2016, analyzes these shifts in strategy, and highlights the domestic and geopolitical consequences. Of primary concern to the author was the Obama-Biden administration’s "partnership with the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt and the region". This implicit and explicit partnership, Phares argues, created additional domestic and regional problems, including the emboldening of Jihadists. Just as important to the author was the Iran Deal. According to Phares, it was for this deal that the Iranian people were abandoned, ISIS could not be defeated, and allies such as the Gulf and Israel were sidelined.
Phares also paints a picture of paralysis surrounding the peace process. By strictly adhering to a failed paradigm for finding peace in the Middle East, the Obama-Biden administration failed to foster peace agreements between Israel and moderate Arab countries. Under Obama-Biden, relations between Washington and Jerusalem deteriorated, delaying any substantive movement until Trump’s administration. Phares cites other crises with impact on U.S. national security, including the abandonment of civil societies during the Arab Spring, rejection of vetting, the removal of instructional material from U.S. agency programs needed to understand the Jihadi threat, and the Obama administration’s encouragement of the entrance into the United States of immigrants who might not share our American value system.
Phares argues that the Obama administration and the Clinton campaign tried to crush the Trump campaign, not just out of traditional political interests and party dichotomy, but also because a Trump win would mean a near reversal of what they viewed as a “realism-based” foreign policy. That would include withdrawal from the Iran Deal, which would affect the interests of several circles profiting from that deal. The author also argues it was Obama's bureaucrats who created and used the Mueller Probe to derail Trump's foreign policy in an attempt protect power interests, including political and financial windfalls resulting from the Iran Deal and other detrimental partnerships in the region.
By in large, The Choice is a compelling and extremely worthwhile read, particularly for those who have not yet cast their votes. However, the author tends to gloss over a few of the weaknesses of Trump’s foreign policy, such as his abandonment of our Kurdish allies who had worked valiantly to defeat ISIS alongside us, to Turkish forces, particularly in the Idlib province of Syria. He, instead, casts the responsibility for this on the extremely powerful Qatar and Turkish Muslim Brotherhood lobby in Washington, ignoring the enormous power of the presidency.
Having had said that, in The Choice, Phares demonstrates that despite an array of weapons set against him, Trump was able to move decisively on several of the foreign policy and national security issues the Obama administration left in its wake. The Trump administration’s successes included withdrawal from the Iran Deal, decisively crushing ISIS, launching an Arab Coalition, isolating Venezuela's regime, renewed Brazil-U.S. relations, and countering China's financial takeover of U.S. interests, among others. And his single most symbolic and historic achievement was sponsoring two peace agreements under the Abraham Accords between UAE, Bahrain, Sudan, and Israel.
Phares admits that not everything was successfully resolved and there are still more critical actions that must take place to secure foreign policy initiatives and strategies in the best interest of the United States, but Trump was able to produce the results he did despite the investigations, obstruction, and impeachment processes. Indeed, mistakes were made, and many staff changes rocked the White House, but Phares argues that the choice in 2020 is between the disastrous eight years of Obama-Biden foreign policy and the four years of Trump-Pence, which took the first steps toward a startlingly successful reversal of those disastrous policies. The title and analysis by the author suggest that the next four years under Biden-Harris would be, in fact, a third Obama foreign policy term, while re-electing Trump would provide opportunity to successfully address the remaining challenges.
Walid Phares’ bio is as long as it is impressive. He has been influential within circles of think tanks and foreign policy, appearing in media foreign and domestic for years, but most notably, he served as the first foreign policy advisor to Donald Trump in 2016. Prior to the Trump campaign, in addition to advising many members of Congress and the European Parliament, Phares served as Mitt Romney's national security advisor in the 2012 campaign. Phares is a prolific author with 14 books in English, French, and Arabic. Three of his books drew universal attention: Future Jihad in 2005, predicting the evolution of the Jihadist networks, The Coming Revolution in 2010, predicting the Arab Spring, and The Lost Spring in 2014, projecting the rise of post al Qaeda ISIS and the Iran Deal effects.
In contrast to Phares’ scholarly books on geopolitics, The Choice debuts as his first nonacademic political book, yet it could well prove to be the most important as it reveals two distinct paths for the future of U.S. foreign policy emerging from 12 years of dueling between two diametrically opposed strategies.
**Sarah N. Stern is Founder and President of the Endowment for Middle East Truth, EMET, an unabashedly pro-American and pro-Israel think tank and policy institute in Washington, D.C.

Shame on the Girl Scouts: Thin Skin instead of Thin Mints
Alan M. Dershowitz/Gatestone Institute./October 31, 2020
The Tweet was anything but partisan or political. It was a girl's organization dedicated to educating young women about their unlimited possibilities in life. The Tweet itself was innocuous. Here is what it said: "Congratulations Amy Coney Barrett on becoming the 5th woman appointed to the Supreme Court since its inception in 1789."
When the Girl Scouts can't even congratulate a woman for helping to break a longstanding glass ceiling, we know that we are in trouble.
The reason I am so angry at the Girl Scouts' decision to withdraw their original Tweet is that it is a reflection of the divisive nature of our nation and the growing intolerance, particularly by the hard left, of dissenting speech that is seen as supporting the other side.
The Girl Scouts' decision to withdraw their original Tweet...is a reflection of...the growing intolerance, particularly by the hard left, of dissenting speech that is seen as supporting the other side.
I don't know why I am so mad at the Girl Scouts for having withdrawn their Tweet congratulating Justice Amy Coney Barrett for being the fifth woman nominated to the Supreme Court in its long history. The Tweet was anything but partisan or political. It was a girl's organization dedicated to educating young women about their unlimited possibilities in life. The Tweet itself was innocuous. Here is what it said: ""Congratulations Amy Coney Barrett on becoming the 5th woman appointed to the Supreme Court since its inception in 1789."
It was accompanied by a collage of photographs of the five women who have served on the high court – three of them liberals and two conservatives. But when a few angry leftists led by Cambridge U.S. Rep. Ayanna Pressley and actor Amber Tamblyn complained, the Girl scouts quickly removed the Tweet and apologized for doing something that could be "viewed as a political and a partisan statement."
Megyn Kelly responded quite appropriately to that absurd claim saying:
"This is pathetic. It's not 'partisan' to generically congratulate the 5th woman ever to join the High Court. It's patriotic. Taking your tweet down is partisan, however, and a real disappointment.
In reporting the story, the USA Today said that: "The retreat by the Girl Scouts was quickly assailed by many of Barrett's conservative supporters." That entirely missed the point. I am neither conservative, nor a Barratt supporter. I was opposed to the Republican Senate rushing this nomination through after denying an earlier one from President Obama when he nominated the highly qualified Merrick Garland, and the Republicans refused to process the nomination. I believe that Barrett is also highly qualified but the Senate should have waited until after the election and allowed the winner to make the nomination.
Senator Lisa Murkowski of Alaska may have gotten it right when she voted against allowing the Senate to consider the nomination, but after that view was rejected, she then voted to confirm Justice Barrett, arguing that the process issues should not be used against a highly qualified nominee.
The reason I am so angry at the Girl Scouts' decision to withdraw their original Tweet is that it is a reflection of the divisive nature of our nation and the growing intolerance, particularly by the hard left, of dissenting speech that is seen as supporting the other side.
When the Girl Scouts can't even congratulate a woman for helping to break a longstanding glass ceiling , we know that we are in trouble. I was a Boy Scout and had many friends who were Girl Scouts. We loved scouting. We never considered it political or partisan. My family and I always buy the thin mints that are our favorite Girl Scout cookies. I will continue to enjoy the thin mints, but from now on they will cause a bitter taste in my mouth because of the thin skin manifested by the Girl Scout leadership in submitting to censorial pressures from intolerant hard left activists.
*Alan M. Dershowitz is the Felix Frankfurter Professor of Law, Emeritus at Harvard Law School and author of the book, Guilt by Accusation: The Challenge of Proving Innocence in the Age of #MeToo, Skyhorse Publishing, 2019. His new podcast, "The Dershow," can be seen on Spotify, Apple and YouTube. He is the Jack Roth Charitable Foundation Fellow at Gatestone Institute.
© 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.


Donald Trump’s Economy Really was Better than Obama’s
Karl W Smith/Bloomberg/October, 31/2020
Joe Biden has argued that President Donald Trump didn’t so much build a strong economy as inherit one. It’s a good line — but it ignores the successes, at least before the pandemic, of Trump’s unconventional policy. If Biden is elected president, he should continue Trump’s economic approach rather than returning to Barack Obama’s. Between December 2009 and December 2016, the unemployment rate dropped 5.2 percentage points, from 9.9 percent to 4.7 per cent. By December 2019, it had fallen another 1.2 percentage points, to 3.5 percent. A cursory look at those numbers might lead you to believe that the improvement under Trump was at best a continuation of a trend that began nearly a decade earlier. It’s necessary to place those numbers in context. By 2016, officials in the Treasury Department and at the Federal Reserve had concluded that the economy was at full employment and that further improvement in the labor market was unlikely. This was in line with the Congressional Budget Office’s guidance that further declines in the unemployment rate would push the economy beyond its sustainable capacity.
Once in office, Trump ignored this consensus. He implemented a program of tax cuts, spending increases, and unprecedented pressure on the Fed to cut interest rates to zero and keep them there. Trump’s goal of 3 percent growth was derided as delusional, while a bipartisan chorus of commentators declared his policies reckless and irresponsible.
They were anything but. Not only did the unemployment rate continue to fall, but the percentage of Americans aged 25 to 54 either employed or looking for a job saw its first sustained rise since the late 1980s. This inflection point changed the character of the labor market.
In 2016, real median household income was $62,898, just $257 above its level in 1999. Over the next three years it grew almost $6,000, to $68,703. That’s perhaps why, despite the pandemic, 56 percent of US voters polled last month said their families were better off today than they were four years ago.
The key to that number is the breadth of Trump’s expansionary agenda. Republican presidents have typically focused on tax cuts, particularly for businesses, with the idea that they will encourage an increase in investment and wages. Democrats have tended to seek spending increases, often with the hope that they will stimulate the overall economy and increase job growth. Presidents of both parties have traditionally left interest-rate policy to the Fed. Trump broke the mold by aggressively battling on all three fronts. He also sought to increase jobs in manufacturing and agriculture by pursuing a series of trade wars (most economists, from across the ideological spectrum, think this policy backfired.) Nonetheless, if one had to choose between Trump’s three good policies plus trade wars, or the more modest economic policies of his predecessors, the easy choice is Trump.
Ideally, a Biden administration — which looks increasingly likely — would keep Trump’s three growth-enhancing policies and jettison his trade initiatives. What is crucial, however, is that it not believe its own campaign rhetoric and be satisfied with merely returning to the policies of the Obama administration. Trump proved that an aggressive growth strategy can improve the fortunes of the average American family, that strategy should continue.

From Spain to Italy, Europe Is Fed Up with Lockdowns

Ferdinando Giugliano/Bloomberg/October, 31/2020
After a summer of hope, Europe looks set for a tragic winter. The dream of keeping the pandemic in check with limited sacrifices is gone. Governments are readying themselves for a new round of tough containment measures.
Ireland paved the way a week and a half ago, imposing a national lockdown while keeping schools and essential stores open. France has similarly ordered a shutdown, just a few months after president Emmanuel Macron categorically ruled one out. In Germany, chancellor Angela Merkel has spearheaded a partial lockdown for the month of November, one that will put a stop to leisure activities. Italy has imposed a 6 p.m. curfew for bars and restaurants but could opt for more draconian rules.
As new curbs on personal freedom loom, it’s worth asking: Are citizens going to accept them as they did during the first wave of the virus? From Italy to Spain, many are already taking to the streets to protest the impact of restrictions on their financial security. Politicians must find ways to address their concerns or risk a collapse of social cohesion.
As I argued in August, more lockdowns were never off the table. Although leaders vowed to tackle a second wave through tracking, tracing and “smart,” localized lockdowns, the rising number of deaths and hospitalizations is giving them no choice but to impose stricter measures. Even Sweden, which opted for a relatively light-touch strategy during the first wave, is now enforcing more restrictions, at least in some areas.
The current approach across Europe differs, however, from that taken during the spring. Governments appear desperate to keep open as much of their economies as possible, as they fear a spike in bankruptcies, unemployment and ever larger budget deficits. Spain and Italy are resisting the blanket bans on non-essential activities they had previously adopted. Politicians also want to keep schools open, even though this likely contributes to propagating contagion. Italy has reverted to distant learning for high school kids, but elsewhere on the continent we are not seeing the same widespread school closures we had in the first half of 2020.
Still, any lockdown is going to require collaboration from the population. Most European countries benefited from exceptional levels of compliance to stay-at-home orders in the spring. Now, as protests in cities such as Rome and Barcelona show, people’s frustration and rage are growing.
To some extent, this is the natural consequence of earlier policies. There was always a risk that people would become tired of staying home, especially if it looked like their efforts weren’t paying off. Generalized lockdowns were always an imperfect long-term containment strategy for the virus, as the economic shock hits citizens hard. It also hits the same people again and again, from waiters to ballet dancers.
But European governments have themselves to blame for this wave of discontent. During the spring, they could be excused for being caught off guard. This line of defense no longer holds. As citizens continue to face shortages of tests and hospital beds, many are asking what exactly politicians did to prepare for the colder season. There is also anger that businesses were forced to invest in sanitizers and other health precautions only to then be shut down again. Policy makers should have been more honest about the long-term uncertainty linked to the pandemic, rather than raising expectations of a swift return to normality.
Leaders must now do a better job of bringing citizens on board with new restrictions. They must ensure that measures are proportionate and based on scientific advice, and that the public sector does its part to limit the spread of contagion — for example by reducing crowds on public transport. They must do better at communicating the thinking behind their decisions. Finally, they must put together adequate financial support and get it swiftly to those in need. During the first wave, countries such as Germany managed this far more efficiently than others such as Italy.
Europe is heading into winter with a tired and scared population. The challenge will be finding a way to fight the pandemic while keeping social peace.

Don't Ignore the Good News On Covid-19 From Asia

Lionel Laurent/Bloomberg/October, 31/2020
It’s easy to feel that there’s no light at the end of the Covid-19 tunnel. Europe’s intensive care wards are filling up again, pushing France and Germany into a fresh round of stay-at-home restrictions and lockdowns — albeit ones designed to be softer than the first. Even countries hit hard by the first wave, such as Italy and Sweden, are seeing rising cases, suggesting herd immunity is a long way off. The US looks to have given up on controlling the pandemic until a vaccine arrives.
Yet we shouldn’t ignore the better news from Asia. The strategies pursued by South Korea, Vietnam, China and others do still seem to be paying off. While the total Covid-19 death toll is between 500-700 per million people in France, the UK, Spain and the US, in China and South Korea it is below 10 per million. Cases are a less perfect measure, but there’s a similar observable gap. Wuhan, once the epicenter of Covid-19, is welcoming tourists again.
The perception of an Asian advantage in this pandemic often falls prey to essentialist thinking: That somehow the East is doing things the West could never do, and that it’s largely down to profound differences in values, politics and culture. If China is able to contain Covid-19, it must be because of draconian government policy and the social bonds of Confucianism. If Singapore has 28 deaths, credit must lie with Lee Kuan Yew’s founding legacy of authoritarian pragmatism.
There are likely far less intangible forces at work. If the key to avoiding more lockdowns is finding a way to “live with the virus” — through widespread testing, tracing of contacts and isolating positive cases to slow transmission — Western countries have made structural, not cultural, errors.
Extensive testing was rolled out in Europe after the first wave, but too slowly and too late to avoid delays and bottlenecks. Contact tracers were too few; digital apps were left to wither on the vine. Positive cases didn’t take isolation seriously, because of a lack of enforcement and patchy financial support. These aren’t questions of philosophy, but about implementation of policy. Angela Merkel, Germany’s chancellor, admitted as much on Thursday when she said European Union leaders should have acted sooner. Even the famously organized Germans failed to halt the second wave.
Compare that with Asia, where public-health systems have proven more robust. South Korea tested early, and often, using walk-in centers and drive-throughs. In Wuhan, the authorities tested 11 million people over 2 weeks. The share of tests coming back positive in South Korea and Vietnam is below 1%; in France and Spain it has risen to 10%.
While contact-tracing strategies such as Vietnam’s “third-degree” sweep of personal data — or Hong Kong’s geofencing wristbands — would spook the average Londoner, Europeans failed to implement their own alternatives properly. Between July and August, for example, the number of contacts traced per positive case in France fell to 2.4 from 4.5. If test-and-trace slackens off like this, no wonder we can’t control the virus’s spread.
As for the quarantining of positive cases, the decision by China and South Korea to monitor — or imprison, some might grumble — patients with milder cases in special-care centers is worth considering. Keeping people cooped up at home doesn’t seem that much more liberal, especially when people are tempted outside by the need to earn a living. It’s also far less effective, with one study estimating that isolation in institutions could avert almost three times as many cases as home-based isolation throughout an epidemic.
The differences between Asia and Europe look more rooted in recent, not ancient, history. Over the past 20 years, Asia has been hit with several epidemics, such as SARS in 2003 and MERS in 2015, which forced countries to adapt and improve their institutions. This also spurred countries to invest in public health: Between 2000 and 2016, Vietnam’s per-capita health spending increased by an average of 9% per year. By contrast, European countries have been shutting hospitals and beds, with financial crises more front of mind than disease.
As Europeans start their winter lockdown, they should remember that improvements are achievable. And the good news is that countries are collaborating more at the EU level, on efforts such as rolling out quicker antigen tests and sharing resources. If Asia managed to learn from past pandemics, the West should be able to as well.

Message to Biden from the Arab world: No return to appeasing Iran
Baria Alamuddin/Arab News/October 31/2020
بارعة علم الدين/رسالة من العالم العربي إلى جو بايدن تقول: لا عودة إلى استرضاء إيران والتملق لها

http://eliasbejjaninews.com/archives/91959/baria-alamuddin-message-to-biden-from-the-arab-world-no-return-to-appeasing-iran-%d8%a8%d8%a7%d8%b1%d8%b9%d8%a9-%d8%b9%d9%84%d9%85-%d8%a7%d9%84%d8%af%d9%8a%d9%86-%d8%b1%d8%b3%d8%a7%d9%84%d8%a9-%d9%85/
As a Joe Biden victory in the US election has seemed increasingly probable over recent weeks, there has been an immense volume of debate throughout the Arab world as to what a Biden presidency would mean for this troubled region; from those desperate to see an end to the chaos of the Trump years, to those who fear an Obama-inspired return to appeasing Tehran.
The Arab world primarily looks to a prospective Biden administration for global re-engagement, working with European, NATO and Arab allies to re-establish a rules-based order so that dictatorial strongmen and pariah regimes can’t dominate near-neighbors with ruthless impunity. Enough of Putin, Erdogan, Netanyahu and Khamenei grappling for supremacy throughout the region, trampling Arab sovereignty and identity underfoot.
Leaders in Tehran, meanwhile, hope Biden leadership means easing of sanctions and unmolested continuation of their belligerent regional policies, while waiting for America to come begging for a diluted version of the 2015 nuclear deal. Biden should thus strengthen his hand by affirming that there will be no sanctions respite until Iran definitively agrees to live peacefully within its own borders, renouncing terrorism, paramilitarism and nuclear ambitions.
The fact that the International Atomic Energy Agency recently revealed that the regime, at immense cost, is building a new underground site for enriching uranium at Natanz is proof enough that the ayatollahs aren’t preparing for a rapid return to compliance with their obligations. While ordinary Iranians starve, this regime squanders its wealth on nuclear weapons.
Immediately after the US presidential inauguration, Iran will enter its own presidential elections season, making hopes for a quick deal expressed by some Biden aides appear wildly optimistic. Indeed, rushed efforts to revive the 2015 deal risk repeating Obama’s mistake in appearing more eager than Tehran for an agreement, resulting in one side making most of the concessions.
On the contrary, Iran should be the one compelled to come and beg for a deal. Khamenei’s xenophobic regime believes nuclear arsenals and paramilitary armies guarantee its survival against a hostile world. It will make concessions in these domains only as a last resort to stave off regime collapse. Reports have been circulating about behind-the-scenes communications between Iranians, Israelis and US officials. Indeed, after three years of intensified sanctions, it may be that Tehran is already more desperate for a deal than it would like us to believe.
The Obama and Trump presidencies were broadly defined by a desire to reduce America’s embroilment in foreign quagmires. Yet in Beirut, Baghdad, Kabul and a host of other capitals today, there is a veritable thirst for the re-emergence of muscular Western diplomacy, to outmaneuver Iran and its allies, and in defense of stability and effective governance.
Biden should strengthen his hand by affirming that there will be no sanctions respite until Iran definitively agrees to live peacefully within its own borders, renouncing terrorism, paramilitarism and nuclear ambitions.
A swift Biden intervention could have a major impact in Lebanon. After months of prevarication, with Saad Hariri back in the frame as prime minister, vigorous Biden support for French President Emmanuel Macron’s efforts in favor of a competent, technocratic government could open the floodgates for an IMF deal, while also thwarting Hezbollah.
US readiness to recommence talks with Tehran should be premised on Iran instructing its paramilitary allies in Lebanon and Iraq to allow democratic processes to take their course, halting attempts at destabilization with the objective of capturing the political system for themselves. Ultimately, America and its allies must follow through and ensure the wholesale disarmament and dismantlement of these militias, if the region is to enjoy any kind of long-term stability and security.
Biden will also need to grapple with the Palestine issue. He should set aside Trump and Netanyahu’s attempts to prejudice the issue, and instead acknowledge Palestinian territorial rights throughout the occupied territories and East Jerusalem. Biden’s commitment to Israel’s security may be “ironclad,” but Israel can enjoy long-term security only in the context of a just peace deal with Palestinians, as well as with Arab neighbors.
The aspirations of ordinary people throughout the Arab world are remarkably normal: They want jobs, stability, and quality education and health services for their families. Women demand the same freedoms and opportunities as men. Citizens don’t desire to be dominated by extremists — not Daesh, the Muslim Brotherhood, or Iran’s proxies. Faced with water shortages, desertification, extreme temperatures and overdependence on oil, this is a region that stands to benefit from Biden’s emphasis on climate change.
This is furthermore a region burdened by vast displaced populations — Syrians, Palestinians, Yemenis, Iraqis, Libyans, Sudanese, and now even Lebanese looking for a better life overseas. By rolling back Trump’s funding cuts for refugees and giving immediate attention to this challenge, Biden can prevent fresh humanitarian catastrophes and the knock-on ramifications of extremism; mass population movements. smuggling of people, arms and narcotics, and chronic regionwide instability.
A Biden administration will be faced with a massive pile of domestic and foreign priorities, not least of which will be reaching strategic understandings with China. Meanwhile, an outgoing Trump administration is widely expected to adopt a scorched-earth policy, making life as problematic as possible for its successor. After four years of Trump, US institutions are already in chaos; for example; the hollowed-out and politicized State Department, where a host of diplomatic positions remain empty. Thus, it may be many months before Biden makes any progress toward unveiling an ambitious multilateral global agenda, let alone striking a quick-win deal with Tehran.
Americans have been attracted to Biden’s candidacy because he is a moderate, non-divisive figure, a contrast to the controversies and confrontations of the Trump years. Let’s hope that Biden also has the caliber to be a unifying force on the global stage.
The Middle East enjoys immense potential and vast resources. But we have learned from bitter experience that the wider world can enjoy tranquility and prosperity only when the threats of extremism, instability and inequality in this strategically crucial region are confronted head-on.
* Baria Alamuddin is an award-winning journalist and broadcaster in the Middle East and the UK. She is editor of the Media Services Syndicate and has interviewed numerous heads of state.