English LCCC Newsbulletin For Lebanese, Lebanese Related, Global News & Editorials
For November 30/2020
Compiled & Prepared by: Elias Bejjani

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Bible Quotations For today
We have numerous Talents and all of us are one body in Christ
Letter to the Romans 12/01-08: “I appeal to you therefore, brothers and sisters, by the mercies of God, to present your bodies as a living sacrifice, holy and acceptable to God, which is your spiritual worship. Do not be conformed to this world, but be transformed by the renewing of your minds, so that you may discern what is the will of God what is good and acceptable and perfect. For by the grace given to me I say to everyone among you not to think of yourself more highly than you ought to think, but to think with sober judgement, each according to the measure of faith that God has assigned. For as in one body we have many members, and not all the members have the same function, so we, who are many, are one body in Christ, and individually we are members one of another. We have gifts that differ according to the grace given to us: prophecy, in proportion to faith; ministry, in ministering; the teacher, in teaching; the exhorter, in exhortation; the giver, in generosity; the leader, in diligence; the compassionate, in cheerfulness.”

Titles For The Latest English LCCC Lebanese & Lebanese Related News & Editorials published on November 29-30/2020

Nothing In The Terrorist Hezbollah is Lebanese/Elias Bejjani/November 29/2020
Health Ministry: 1266 new cases of Corona, 13 deaths
Al-Rahi Holds 'Important' Talks on Lebanon with Pope FrancisLebanon to ease virus curbs from Monday
Lebanon to ease virus curbs from Monday
Schools in Lebanon reopen, other sectors gradually/Najia Houssari/November 30, 2020
Hassan Suggests Keeping Lockdown in Some Areas, Says Odd-Even Rule Harmful
Lebanon to Revise Curfew Hours, Reopen Restaurants
Hariri Still Insisting on Govt. of Specialists, Says Alloush
Hariri said to present first draft Cabinet lineup soon
Can Caretaker Government Legalize Public Sector Audit?
Diab Denies Being Hizbullah's PM, Says Did Not Bow to Bassil
Kim Jong Un receives reply message from President of Lebanon
Lebanon qualifies for Asian Basketball Championship after winning over Iraq
Army: Two Sudanese nationals caught trying to enter occupied Palestine from Lebanon
Frem says he did not regret resigning from Parliament, will return with a political movement to change the entire system
Biden should look to Lebanon if he wants a deal with Iran/Dr. Dania Koleilat Khatib/Arab News/November 29/ 2020

Titles For The Latest English LCCC Miscellaneous Reports And News published
 on
November 29-30/2020

Israel on High Alert after Iran Vows to Avenge Nuclear Scientist’s Killing
Questions for Israel Mount after Iran Scientist's Killing
Iran Mulls Response as It Prepares to Bury Killed Nuclear Scientist
Iran vows revenge after assassination of top nuclear scientist
Former CIA official: Iranian scientist was irreplaceable
Iranian scientist's widow: He wanted to be a martyr, his wish came true
Iran approves raising rate of uranium enrichment following killing of senior scientist
Iranian official: The end of Israel is near
EU condemns elimination of Iranian scientist
J Street condemns killing of top Iranian nuclear scientist
Report: Saudi Crown Prince delayed Israel deal because of US election results
Ethiopia: Military Operation in Tigray Region Over, Hunt for Tigray Leaders Begins
Afghan Officials Say 34 Killed in Separate Suicide Bombings
New Sanctions on Turkey for Violating Libya Arms Embargo


Titles For The Latest LCCC English analysis & editorials from miscellaneous sources published on November 29-30/2020

L’Iran et le théâtre des ombres/Charles Elias Chartouni/November 29/2020
A generation of fighters who died by the sword/Seth J. Frantzman/Jerusalem Post/November 29/2020
Court Validates Child Rape: Persecution of Christians, October 2020/Raymond Ibrahim/Gatestone Institute./November 29, 2020
France must reconnect with its citizens of Arab origin/Faisal J. Abbas/Arab News/November 29/ 2020
France would not be France without Arab, Muslim contribution/Ludovic Pouille/Arab News/November 29/ 2020
Republican Senate should thwart US return to JCPOA/Dalia Al-Aqidi/Arab News/November 29/ 2020
Iran’s economy will continue to struggle during Biden presidency/Dr. Majid Rafizadeh/Arab News/November 29/ 2020

 

The Latest English LCCC Lebanese & Lebanese Related News & Editorials published on November 29-30/2020

Nothing In The Terrorist Hezbollah is Lebanese
Elias Bejjani/November 29/2020
لا شيء لبناني في حزب الله الإرهابي
http://eliasbejjaninews.com/archives/93002/elias-bejjani-nothing-in-the-terrorist-hezbollah-is-lebanese-%d9%84%d8%a7-%d8%b4%d9%8a%d8%a1-%d9%84%d8%a8%d9%86%d8%a7%d9%86%d9%8a-%d9%81%d9%8a-%d8%ad%d8%b2%d8%a8-%d8%a7%d9%84%d9%84%d9%87-%d8%a7%d9%84/
Sadly, the majority of our Lebanese politicians, so falsely called political parties, as well as the Terrorist Hezbollah’s hand picked subservient appointed top officials, and in particular the Christian ones are mere Trojans.
They are betraying the peace loving Lebanese people, and marginalizing their deeply rooted great and rich history of 7000 years.
They are evilly practicing with no conscience or shame all sorts of mean Dhimmitude, cowardice, Taqiyya, Deception, treason, political prostitution, ethical meanness, stupidity, and ignorance.
Like Judas Iscariot the majority of these Christian Trojans in particular have sold Lebanon and its people as well as the martyrs, values, and existence with less than thirty pieces of silver.
They, and with no shame or fear of Almighty God and His Last Day of Judgment are currently hailing the Terrorist Hezbollah’s crimes, invasions and wars and feeling sorry not for the victims but for the Hezbollah killers.
These Lebanese deviated Leaders, politicians, corrupted officials and so called political parties are disastrous on all levels and in all domains.
In reality these leaders and politicians are the actual enemies of Lebanon and its people.
In a bid to save and liberate our beloved Lebanon from Both the Iranian terrorist Hezbollah, and at the same time from the current ruling officials and rotten political we call for the implementation of all the UN resolutions that address Lebanon’s crisis,
The Armistice Treaty signed with the State Of Israel as well the UN Resolutions 1701, 1559 and 1680
These four resolutions secure in their articles:
*The Liberation of our beloved Lebanon and the reclaiming of its confiscated independence, freedom and sovereignty.
*The Disarming of all armed militias, Lebanese and non Lebanese and whatever their names and claims are.
*Give the Lebanese Army and all other Lebanese legitimate armed forces to be the sole armed Lebanese units on the entire Lebanese soil.
*Give the Lebanese army solely to take control of the Lebanese borders with both Syria and the state of Israel as well as Lebanon’s maritime borders
May Almighty God Bless and safeguard Lebanon and its loving peace people.

 

Health Ministry: 1266 new cases of Corona, 13 deaths
NNA/November 29, 2020  
The Ministry of Public Health announced, on Sunday, that 1266 new Corona cases have been reported, thus raising the cumulative number of confirmed cases to-date to 126,903.
It also indicated that 13 death cases were also registered during the past 24 hours.

 

Al-Rahi Holds 'Important' Talks on Lebanon with Pope Francis
Naharnet/November 29, 2020
Maronite Patriarch Beshara al-Rahi has held an “important and noteworthy meeting in form and content” with Pope Francis in the Vatican, An-Nahar newspaper reported on Sunday. Al-Rahi traveled to the Vatican specifically to meet with the pontiff, which gives the one-hour meeting that was held Saturday “extraordinary indications,” the daily said. “Patriarch al-Rahi expressed to the pope the concerns of the Lebanese and the fear they have over the possibility of the loss of the Lebanese religious coexistence model,” An-Nahar added.
Al-Rahi warned that Lebanon and its people, especially Christians, are facing an “existential danger,” the daily said. “The level of fear of hunger and the ambition to emigrate are surging in the minds and hearts of the Lebanese, who now fear for the future of their children,” the patriarch reportedly told the pope, pointing out that “a quick rescue operation is necessary to pull Lebanon out of its crisis before it’s too late.” Al-Rahi also urged the pontiff to “play a role in this rescue process in order to preserve Lebanon’s unity as a model for coexistence through the Vatican’s international relations.” “Lebanon aspires to be a unified state that is strong through its people, army and institutions, and this can happen through positive neutrality whose plan has become ready and feasible should there be domestic consensus over it,” the patriarch told the pope. He also invited the pontiff to visit Lebanon.An-Nahar said al-Rahi is expected to return to Lebanon on Sunday.


Lebanon to ease virus curbs from Monday
AFP/November 29, 2020
Schools would also reopen but with some classes still held online
Restaurants will reopen at 50% capacity, but bars and nightclubs will remain closed and weddings prohibited
BEIRUT: Lebanon is from Monday to gradually ease restrictions imposed two weeks ago after a surge in coronavirus infections, in a bid to relieve its struggling economy in time for the festive season, officials said.
Acting health minister Hamad Hassan told reporters the country “will gradually reopen from Monday” to give citizens and businesses a respite ahead of Christmas and end of year holidays.
He said restaurants will reopen at 50 percent capacity, but bars and nightclubs will remain closed and weddings prohibited, while an overnight curfew will start from 11 p.m. instead of 5pm. Schools would also reopen but with some classes still held online, Hassan said after a meeting of Lebanon’s coronavirus task force. He warned that the “danger” of a rise in infections still exists and that the hoped-for results to stem the virus thanks to the curbs would not be known for several days. Before the two-week restrictions went into force in mid-November, bed occupancy in hospital intensive care units was between 80 and 90 percent while “now it stands at 65-70 percent,” Hassan said.
Since February, the country has recorded more than 125,000 Covid-19 cases, including around 1,000 deaths. Lebanon, with a population of around six million, had been recording some 11,000 coronavirus infections on average each week before mid-November, according to the health ministry.
A first country-wide lockdown imposed in March was effective in stemming the spread of the virus, before restrictions were gradually lifted as summer beckoned people outdoors. But the number of cases surged following a monstrous blast at Beirut’s port on August 4 that killed more than 200 people, wounded at least 6,500 and overwhelmed hospitals. The blast and the pandemic have exacerbated tensions in the Mediterranean country which has been grappling with its worst economic crisis since the 1975-1990 civil war.

Schools in Lebanon reopen, other sectors gradually

Najia Houssari/November 30, 2020
The death toll in Lebanon has reached 1,000, while the total number of confirmed cases has jumped to more than 126,000 cases, at a rate of more than 1,200 cases per day during the past two weeks
BEIRUT: The Ministry of Education will reopen schools for integrated education starting on Monday. This comes after two weeks of closure and amid objections from civil bodies and commentators working in the public field.
Hilda El-Khoury, director of the counseling and guidance department at the Ministry of Education, said: “Returning to education through the combined method will be within the preventive measures that were previously approved.”
However, the Civil Emergency Authority in Lebanon said: “The decision will lead to a health crisis affecting the most vulnerable people, namely children and underage students, especially with the number of cases not declining since before the closure, and with the noticeable increase in the daily number of deaths.” The Ministerial Committee for Combating the Coronavirus has meanwhile maintained its decision to impose a partial curfew in Lebanon but amended its implementation hours. Instead of starting at 5:00 p.m. each evening, the curfew now begins at 11 p.m. and ends at 5 a.m., provided that restaurants, cafes and malls close at 10:00 pm.
During its meeting on Sunday, the committee decided to restore vehicle movement on roads but maintained the suspension of social activities, cinemas and nightclubs. Health minister for Lebanon’s caretaker government, Hamad Hassan, said that the adoption of the strategy, permitting odd/even license plate vehicles on the roads on alternate days, had doubled the number of COVID-19 cases due to people’s reliance on shared transportation. He said: “The rate of commitment to complete closure in all Lebanese territories has reached 70 percent over the past two weeks.”
Hassan said that the aim of the measures was to alleviate the pressure on the medical and nursing staff. “The required medical measures, completed in terms of expanding the hospitals’ capacity to accommodate the COVID-19 cases, have been completed,” he said. The death toll in Lebanon has reached 1,000, while the total number of confirmed cases has jumped to more than 126,000 cases, at a rate of more than 1,200 cases per day during the past two weeks.
Abdul Rahman Al-Bizri, an infectious disease specialist and member of the emergency committee on coronavirus, regretted the lack of plans for the period following the closure due to a lack of coordination on COVID-19 between state departments. He said that this had kept the country in a state of confusion and chaos while citizens paid a high price in light of the difficult economic and living conditions. Al-Bizri said: “The repeated closures are unsuccessful, and one of their consequences is the decline in economic activity, the life cycle, and the living conditions.”
Meanwhile, video footage of Health Minister Hamad Hassan went viral on Saturday. It showed him cutting a cake for the birthday of Hezbollah Secretary-General Hassan Nasrallah in the open market in Baalbek city.
The video was circulated on social media and caused a scandal following a similar episode in which the same minister was involved months ago. The people of his town in the Bekaa met him during the peak of the spread of coronavirus, and he danced among them carrying a sword. Some people carried him on their shoulders and other social distancing measures were also not observed. The Syndicate of Owners of Restaurants, Cafes, Night-Clubs and Pastries has called in the past few days for the sector to reopen to save what is left of it.
In a statement issued on the eve of the ministerial committees’ meeting, the syndicate called on the caretaker prime minister, Hassan Diab, to “adopt a health-economic approach for the benefit of the rest of the sector.”
The syndicate added: “The sector has fully fulfilled its duties with regard to the preventive measures. “We have also advanced a new approach related to the capacity of institutions, whereby chairs and tables are reallocated to accommodate only 50 percent of the original capacity, guaranteeing that no overcrowding will occur. “We insist on adopting this as a new measure, and we discussed it with the minister of interior, and the sector will reopen its doors on Monday morning while remaining committed to all procedures and laws.”
Bechara Asmar, the head of the General Labor Union, called for the reopening of the country “because it secures a return to the economic cycle during the month of the holidays, protects workers, employees and daily-paid workers in all private, public, and official sectors, and preserves their livelihood at a time when they risk having their wages reduced, starving to death or dying of the coronavirus.”

 

Hassan Suggests Keeping Lockdown in Some Areas, Says Odd-Even Rule Harmful
Naharnet/November 29, 2020
Caretaker Health Minister Hamad Hassan has recommended keeping some regions locked-down over the next 15 days in order to curb the spread of coronavirus. “The odd-even strategy (for the movement of vehicles according to license plates) has doubled the coronavirus cases and worsened the situation because it boosted public transportation,” Hassan said in a radio interview. “We’re heading to a vaccine in February and caution is required until then,” the minister added noting that “there will be new measures in terms of imposing a curfew from 7pm until 5am.”Noting that a two-week lockdown that ends today had been “70% successful,” Hassan said “the objective behind it was to relieve health workers.”“The medical issues have been accomplished and the detection team enjoyed rest during the lockdown period and the outcome is our responsibility all,” the minister added. His remarks come ahead of a meeting for the anti-coronavirus ministerial committee in which revised measures will be announced.


Lebanon to Revise Curfew Hours, Reopen Restaurants
Naharnet/November 29, 2020
Lebanon’s anti-coronavirus ministerial committee on Sunday decided to reopen the country and revise curfew hours, TV networks said. “The ministerial panel has decided to call for an 11pm-5am curfew and the closure of businesses at 10pm,” media reports said after the panel convened at the Grand Serail under caretaker PM Hassan Diab. “The country will be gradually reopened, the odd-even rule will be lifted and restaurants will be allowed to operate at 50% capacity,” the reports added. Weddings will meanwhile remain banned while nightclubs and pubs will remain closed. Speaking at a press conference, caretaker Health Minister Hamad Hassan lamented that some had tried to “outsmart” authorities during the two-week lockdown. “We have to reopen the country gradually and responsibly,” he added. “We must allow the people to breathe economically ahead of the holidays,” he said. Hassan added that caretaker Interior Minister Mohammed Fahmi will announce the details of the reopening plan later in the day.


Hariri Still Insisting on Govt. of Specialists, Says Alloush
Naharnet/November 29, 2020
PM-designate Saad Hariri is still insisting on forming a government of specialists that is not loyal to any political party, al-Mustaqbal Movement politburo member ex-MP Mustafa Alloush said Sunday. “This is irreversible for him,” Alloush added in an interview with MTV. “President (Michel) Aoun still has to accept the 18-minister cabinet line-up and Hariri is expected to visit Baabda but no specific date has yet been set,” Alloush went on to say. He also warned that Hariri’s stepping down would lead to “a quick deterioration” of the situations in Lebanon. “No one will be able to bear the responsibility for that,” Alloush added.

Hariri said to present first draft Cabinet lineup soon

Hussein Dakroub| The Daily Star/November 29, 2020
BEIRUT: After a two-week hiatus, Prime Minister-designate Saad Hariri is expected to meet with President Michel Aoun soon to present him with a draft Cabinet lineup in an attempt to break the weekslong government deadlock, political sources said Sunday.
The Cabinet formation process has been at a complete standstill for two weeks in the absence of meetings between Aoun and Hariri as the two leaders remain poles apart over the naming of Christian ministers in the next government and the adoption of unified criteria in the formation.
“Hariri is likely to visit Baabda Palace next week to present President Aoun with a draft Cabinet lineup. But the visit comes amid high expectations that Aoun will reject the Cabinet lineup due to differences over the mechanism adopted by Hariri to pick by himself names of all ministers in his proposed 18-member Cabinet of specialists,” a political source familiar with the matter said. It would be Hariri’s first draft Cabinet lineup since he was designated to form a new government on Oct. 22.
Aoun and the leading political blocs reject the notion that Hariri would pick all Cabinet ministers, and they insist on naming their nominees for ministerial posts, the source said, adding: “So far, the Cabinet formation process does not appear to be easy.”
The source added that Hariri, backed by France and regional powers, was scrambling to quickly form a new Cabinet ahead of an international conference planned by France on Dec. 2 to drum up humanitarian aid to Lebanon following the Aug. 4 deadly explosion that devastated Beirut Port and destroyed large areas in the capital.
Hariri’s forthcoming visit to Baabda was confirmed Sunday by former Future MP Mustapha Alloush. “Prime Minister Saad Hariri is expected to visit Baabda to present President Aoun with a Cabinet lineup,” Alloush, a member of the Future Movement’s Political Bureau, said in an interview with MTV broadcaster. However, he said he was not sure whether Aoun would accept the proposed Cabinet list. Asked what criteria Hariri was using in forming the next Cabinet, Alloush said: “Prime Minister Hariri is seeking to form an 18-member mission government made up of nonpartisan specialists. The only criterion adopted by Hariri is a government of specialists who are capable of reaching an understanding with the international community and an understanding with the International Monetary Fund [over a $10 billion bailout package].”
He added that Hariri’s proposed Cabinet would not include “members who were slapped with [US] sanctions.” Alloush was referring to the Nov. 6 imposition of US sanctions on Free Patriotic Movement leader MP Gebran Bassil over corruption charges and his ties to Hezbollah, long labeled a terrorist organization by Washington. The sanctions have further complicated Hariri’s attempts to form a new government, already stalled by differences with Aoun over the naming of Christian ministers, as well as by rival factions’ horse-trading for key ministerial seats. Bassil, Aoun’s son-in-law, responded to the US sanctions by hardening his stance and setting conditions for the formation that run counter to Hariri’s proposed 18-member Cabinet.
Alloush ruled out the possibility of Hariri stepping down for now “because such a move will further aggravate the economic situation.”
In a radio interview last week, Alloush said “Hariri is insisting on naming all the ministers,” a major bone of contention between the premier-designate and Aoun and the FPM’s Strong Lebanon bloc which, with 24 MPs, is the biggest bloc in Parliament with the largest Christian representation.
An official source said no date has been set yet for a meeting between Aoun and Hariri in the coming week. “When Hariri wants to come to Baabda, he will call and come,” the source told The Daily Star.
The source said Aoun and Hariri remained at odds over the naming of Christian ministers. “Nothing has changed in the [Cabinet] crisis. Hariri is still insisting on naming the Christian ministers and he has in fact named seven ministers and left the president with the remaining two Christian ministers to name [for the Interior and Defense portfolios]. But the president did not agree to this matter,” the source said, adding: “So far, there have been no new elements suggesting that a breakthrough is imminent.”
MP Mario Aoun from the Strong Lebanon bloc sounded pessimistic about the Cabinet formation soon and rejected Hariri’s decision to name all ministers.
“We don’t understand why Hariri doesn’t want to adopt a unified criterion in the Cabinet formation? He wants to name [all] ministers and everyone knows that the two Shiite groups [Amal Movement and Hezbollah] will name their ministers and Hariri will name the Sunni ministers. So why don’t the Christian parties name their ministers instead of being content with the president naming the interior and defense ministers, while the other seven [Christian] ministers remain in the custody of Hariri?” Aoun said in an interview with the Kuwaiti newspaper Al-Anbaa.
Judging by the course of developments, Aoun said, “It seems there will be no government in the foreseeable term.”
Since his designation to form a new government, Hariri has held nine meetings with Aoun that have failed to resolve differences over the shape and makeup of an 18-member Cabinet of nonpartisan experts to implement a series of structural reforms outlined in the French initiative designed to steer Lebanon out of its worst economic and financial crisis since the 1975-90 Civil War. The reforms are deemed crucial to unlocking promised international aid to the crises-ridden country.
In his latest plea to Lebanese leaders to act to quickly form a new government to enact reforms, French President Emmanuel Macron, in a letter this week to Aoun on the 77th anniversary of Lebanon’s independence from France, stressed that the implementation of the French road map was essential to attracting international aid and averting Lebanon’s economic collapse. Macron’s office Friday said France and the United Nations would host a new conference next week about providing humanitarian aid to Lebanon after the port blast. Macron and UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres will co-preside over the video conference on Dec. 2 which will also include Lebanese nongovernmental groups and other organizations seeking to help. Hezbollah’s deputy leader Sheikh Naim Qassem cited internal and external reasons, including a reported US veto on the group’s participation in the next government, for the Cabinet crisis.
“The premier-designate should have met with heads of blocs to choose the ministers. But his decision not to meet with heads of blocs has delayed [the formation],” Qassem said in an interview with Hezbollah’s Al-Manar TV. “The approval of parliamentary blocs is essential to the Cabinet formation. This is what the Americans must understand.”“The external reason is the American position, which gives signals such as the Americans have said they do not want Hezbollah to be represented [in Cabinet]. The problem is that the Americans are exerting pressure to control the [next] government and they are posing a real obstacle,” Qassem added. “No one from outside [Lebanon], America or others, has the right to say this group can or cannot participate [in the next government].”

Can Caretaker Government Legalize Public Sector Audit?
Naharnet/November 29, 2020
The resigned government is now obliged to legalize the financial audit of state institutions, although some oppose allocating this jurisdiction to a resigned government because it can only convene over emergency and extraordinary situations, parliamentary sources said. “The resigned government cannot sign a contract with a financial auditing company, because it would need a new spending contract to cover the cost of this auditing, and the government cannot secure it because it is acting in a limited caretaker capacity,” the sources added in remarks to Asharq al-Awsat newspaper. Parliament had voted Friday in favor of a sweeping financial audit of state institutions, a week after a consultancy firm terminated its contract to audit the central bank over missing data. The International Monetary Fund and France are among creditors demanding an audit of Lebanon's central bank as part of urgent reforms to unlock financial support, as the country faces a grinding economic crisis. But the central bank has claimed that provisions including Lebanon's Banking Secrecy Law prevent it from releasing some of the necessary information, a charge the justice ministry and legal experts have disputed. Parliament on Friday voted to rule out this justification, clearing the way for the forensic audit to take place. Economist and anti-government activist Jad Chaaban called parliament's decision "a tactic to win time." "You didn't need the lifting of bank secrecy or anything to conduct the" audit, he said. "The problem is again, how do you allow thieves to audit thieves?" he added, referring to authorities. The forensic audit of the Banque du Liban (BDL) is one of the main points of the government's economic rescue plan, approved at the end of April. Several officials, including the finance minister, have said the government is expected to replace Alvarez and Marsal with another consultancy firm soon.

Diab Denies Being Hizbullah's PM, Says Did Not Bow to Bassil
Naharnet/November 29, 2020
Caretaker Prime Minister Hassan Diab on Sunday denied being “Hizbullah’s candidate” as he noted that he did not bow to Free Patriotic Movement chief Jebran Bassil. “I was not Hizbullah's candidate, my government was not Hizbullah's government and I was rather an independent candidate,” Diab said in an interview with MTV’s veteran talk-show host Ricardo Karam. Describing his relation with President Michel Aoun as “very good, cordial and governed by the constitution,” Diab stressed that he did not bow to the will of Aoun’s son-in-law Bassil. “My authority was the constitution and I communicated with him the same as I communicated with the heads of the other blocs,” the caretaker PM added. “Those who know me know that I cannot be subjugated,” Diab stressed. As for the rampant corruption in the country, the premier said “the corruption network is deep-rooted in the country and blocks every reformist project.” “Unfortunately it has become a culture and we need to destroy this culture and replace it with the culture of the state,” Diab added, decrying that “corruption is what is ruling the state today.” As for the catastrophic Beirut port explosion, Diab said the blast was “a form of corruption.”Asked why he postponed a visit to inspect the port’s hangar 12 a few weeks before the explosion, which could have averted the disaster, the caretaker PM said he preferred to wait for concrete information after he received “conflicting reports” about the nature of the stored material.
“To date, my government has not received any satellite images of the Beirut port explosion,” he said about the footage that Lebanon has requested from Western countries. Asked whether the blast was “deliberate,” Diab said “it is up to the judiciary and not the executive authority to rule on this.”“Beirut will rise again as it did in the past,” he reassured. Diab also called for a “technocrat” new government that can address the country’s multiple crises “away from divisions.”
 

Kim Jong Un receives reply message from President of Lebanon
Political Lore/November 29/2020
North Korea leader Kim Jong Un received a reply message from the Lebanese President Michel Aoun, KCNA reports.
In his message, Lebanon’s President expressed his deep gratitude for the congratulations sent by Kim on the occasion of the 77th anniversary of the independence of Lebanon. President Aoun said he highly appreciates those sincere feelings and heartfelt wishes conveyed to the Lebanese people. Over the decades, the two peoples of Lebanon and North Korea reflect the excellent relations, which should be strengthening further. In his letter, President of Lebanon wished Kim good health as ever and expressed hope he will lead North Korea into further progress and prosperity. Since 1981 when Lebanon and North Korea have established diplomatic ties, both countries remain the trade and geopolitical partners.

 

Lebanon qualifies for Asian Basketball Championship after winning over Iraq
NNA/November 29, 2020
Lebanon has officially qualified for the AFC Men's Basketball Championship to be held next year, with a fourth successive victory over Iraq, with a difference of nine points (78-69) in the match that took place between both teams this afternoon in the Bahraini capital, Manama, within the "second window" of the qualifiers. It is to note that Lebanon opened this window on Friday with a successful victory over India, and it also achieved the full mark in the "first window" matches that it hosted in the Nohad Nauffal Complex in Zouk Mikael last February, with two victories over Bahrain (116-73) and Iraq (87-68).

Army: Two Sudanese nationals caught trying to enter occupied Palestine from Lebanon

NNA/November 29, 2020
A Lebanese Army Intelligence patrol unit arrested two Sudanese nationals with initials (M.A) and (A.A) in the vicinity of Mays al-Jabal in the South at dawn today, as they were attempting to cross the technical fence into occupied Palestine from Lebanon, the Army Directorate said in a statement on Sunday.
The Israeli enemy forces forced them to return to the Lebanese territory. Investigations with the detainees have begun under the supervision of the concerned judiciary.

Frem says he did not regret resigning from Parliament, will return with a political movement to change the entire system
NNA/November 29, 2020
Resigned MP Neemat Frem reiterated, in an issued statement on Sunday, that he did not regret "resigning from the Parliament Council, especially in light of the prevailing status quo." Frem said he ran in the parliamentary elections with the aim of triggering change in the country, but then he resigned when he felt that he turned into a "false witness" and could no longer achieve anything from within the council. "When I re-run for said elections, I will return with a major political movement aimed at changing the entire system," he pledged. "When I talk about a political movement, I am referring to institutional work that leads to a structural and fundamental change in political action in Lebanon and reaches the Parliament, which includes all sects and various Lebanese regions, and its main goal is the new Lebanon," Frem explained. He added: "Professionalism and expertise will be the common denominator among all individuals in this movement, which will be based on productivity in all sectors. Its goal will be the human being and how to develop one's life, and it will see the light during the first quarter of the upcoming year." Touching on the early parliamentary elections issue, Frem said: "My first and preferred option is to head quickly to parliamentary elections which would yield a new political class. In this context, however, I am against amending the current election law, for dwelling on this issue will delay the elections for five years." He added: "The most important question today is: does the current parliament still represent the Lebanese people?Referring to the forensic audit issue, he said: "The political class will not allow it to pass, and its rejection by some is because it exposes everything. Those involved in corruption are many, and when a party falls, everyone falls because no one will accept to fall alone."
"Lebanon today is rapidly sliding into a swamp outside of history, and if it remains within the axis of unwillingness to open-up to the Arab world and the West and fails to adopt neutrality, its status will be disastrous," cautioned Frem.
"Putting an end to theft and corruption, and working to reform the institutions, advance the economy and achieve societal protection with a specialized professional class that would restore the true facet of Lebanon, the concept of productivity and the Lebanese notion of a better life, actually parallels the issues of sovereignty and arms in the hands of Lebanese legitimacy," the resigned MP concluded.
 

Biden should look to Lebanon if he wants a deal with Iran
Dr. Dania Koleilat Khatib/Arab News/November 29/ 2020
Iran’s chief nuclear scientist Mohsen Fakhrizadeh was assassinated in Tehran on Friday. Fingers are subsequently being pointed at Israel. The US allies in the region are quite worried about a potential Joe Biden overture toward Iran. For many in the region, the main concern is not Iran’s nuclear portfolio as much as it is the malignant activities of Tehran’s proxies, added to its ballistic missile capabilities.
Fakhrizadeh’s assassination shows that America’s allies are preparing for a potential US detente with Iran. The rapprochement that was witnessed during the Obama era does not inspire any optimism. The nuclear deal that was supposed to convince Iran to give up its ideology and focus on prosperity and growth had the reverse effect. In order not to lose face and appear to have bowed to the US in return for some economic perks, the Iranians compensated for its compromise on the nuclear front with an increase in proxy activities, causing havoc in the region. This increase in Iranian activity provoked a reaction on the other side, as the Arab Gulf states felt led down by their American partner and decided to take their security into their own hands. The result was an increase in turbulence and tensions in the region.
Today, as President-elect Joe Biden plans to return to the negotiating table with Iran, which is one of his campaign promises, he faces a dilemma. He wants to go back to the 2015 nuclear treaty but he does not want to repeat the mistakes of the past. He has also promised to work with allies and adopt a multilateral approach. How can he convince Iran to accept a deal that will include its ballistic missile program and its proxies? Secretary of State Mike Pompeo’s previous 12-point requirement for the lifting of sanctions was met with a flat refusal from the Iranian part. Biden has to modify the nuclear deal, but he also has to introduce conditions that are realistic.
He cannot adopt one of Pompeo’s conditions, which was for Iran to cut all its connections and financing of its proxies in the region. This is because, since its inception, the Iranian regime has positioned itself as the protector of Shiite communities across the Muslim world. It has been nurturing them ideologically, militarily and economically for decades. It will not give up on them just to have the US sanctions lifted.
Since politics is the art of the possible, rather than asking Iran to cut its connections with its proxies, it would be more realistic to ask it to pacify them.
In addition to the emotional attachment between Iran and its proxies, Tehran sees them as a deterrent. Iran views itself as being in a hostile environment. Soon after its inception in 1979, the regime’s neighbors financed Saddam Hussein to launch a war against it to contain the export of the Khomeinist revolution. Added to that, embargoes meant Iran was not allowed to modernize its arsenal. Therefore, the regime sees its proxies as elements that can create a balance of power or even a balance of terror between Iran and its neighbors.
Since politics is the art of the possible, rather than asking Iran to cut its connections with its proxies, it would be more realistic to ask it to pacify them. In this respect, Hezbollah offers a good example. The group is suffering from Israeli strikes in Syria, while there is talk of a possible overture toward its backer Bashar Assad on Israel. Hence, the Syrian regime’s support for the group seems shaky. Meanwhile, at home in Lebanon, US sanctions are starting to exhaust the group. Hezbollah is also facing popular wrath, as it is seen as being part of the corrupt political class that has led the country down the drain.
In this scenario, Hezbollah might be able to compromise if it is offered guarantees that will secure its survival, while giving it a graceful exit. So the Biden administration has a chance to score a win in Lebanon by striking a deal with Hezbollah and Iran. The US can give Hezbollah guarantees that Israel will not strike its facilities or target its personnel. Israel could also commit to defining its borders with Lebanon and withdrawing from the Shebaa Farms. In return, Hezbollah could put its arsenal under the supervision of the Lebanese Army and the Lebanese state could, in turn, sign a non-aggression pact with Israel that would not include a normalization of relations but would release the two countries from mutual aggression. This would be an easy win for the Biden administration. It would stabilize Lebanon and could pave the way for a larger deal with Iran.
*Dr. Dania Koleilat Khatib is a specialist in US-Arab relations with a focus on lobbying. She is co-founder of the Research Center for Cooperation and Peace Building, a Lebanese NGO focused on Track II. She is also an affiliate scholar with the Issam Fares Institute for Public Policy and International Affairs at the American University of Beirut.

 

The Latest English LCCC Miscellaneous Reports And News published on November 29-30/2020

Israel on High Alert after Iran Vows to Avenge Nuclear Scientist’s Killing
Tel Aviv - Nazir Magally/Asharq Al-Awsat/Sunday, 29 November, 2020
Israel put its embassies around the world on high alert on Saturday after Iranian threats of retaliation following the killing of a nuclear scientist near Tehran. Military experts in Tel Aviv described the assassination of Mohsen Fakhrizadeh as a “dramatic operation” as significant as the assassination of Iran's Quds Force commander Qassem Soleimani in January. Security sources in Tel Aviv said that Iran is likely to retaliate through its militias or sleeper cells abroad, because a direct response would trigger to an all-out war. Tehran has blamed Israel for the assassination. Iran’s President Hassan Rouhani threatened an aggressive response to the killing of Fakhrizadeh, while the Iranian Revolution Guards Corps (IRGC) warned that “severe revenge and punishment” has been put on Iran's agenda. Moreover, Lebanon’s Hezbollah announced in a statement that it will strongly stand by Iran. A senior US official said that the United States had nothing to do with the scientist’s killing, reported the Washington Post. The official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss a sensitive matter, said there was little doubt Israel was behind the attack. Dr. Eran Lerman, vice president of the Jerusalem Institute for Strategy and Security, said that the assassination was a message to US President-elect Joe Biden that Iran’s nuclear program file was not just any other political file. Lerman revealed that Fakhrizadeh was not only responsible for developing Tehran’s nuclear program, but in charge of relations with North Korea, which is seen as a major source of Iran’s nuclear expertise. He added that the assassination is no less significant that the killing of Soleimani. “This is strong blow to the Iranian leadership on several levels. First, it is a blow to its nuclear project. No person is irreplaceable, but it will be difficult to recover from this blow. Second, the assassination reveals that Iran is suffering from a serious crisis among its intelligence agencies,” he added. They are remarkably exposed and easily infiltrated, he added.

 

Questions for Israel Mount after Iran Scientist's Killing
Agence France Presse/Sunday, 29 November, 2020
Questions mounted in Israel on Sunday following the assassination of a top Iranian nuclear scientist, with experts speculating on whether Israeli agents were responsible, and if so, how Tehran might respond. Iran's President Hassan Rouhani has blamed Israel for Friday's killing of 59-year-old Mohsen Fakhrizadeh, accusing it of acting as a U.S. "mercenary" and vowing revenge. Officials in Israel have declined to comment on the attack near Tehran, which Iran said was carried out by assailants who opened fire on Fakhrizadeh's car before engaging his bodyguards in a gunfight. The assassination could been have plucked from a script of the new Israeli-made television series "Tehran", which features operatives from the Mossad intelligence agency on a secret mission inside the Islamic Republic. But if Mossad was responsible, Israeli observers were zeroing in on the significance of the timing. Did Israel simply see a chance to carry out an operation long in the planning, or was there a direct link to U.S. President Donald Trump's imminent departure from the White House? For left-leaning Haaretz newspaper, the Trump link was clear. "The timing of the assassination, even if it was determined by purely operational considerations, is a clear message to President-elect Joe Biden, intended to show Israel's criticism of the intent to return to the nuclear accord with Iran," it said. Biden has promised a return to diplomacy with Iran after four hawkish years under Trump, who withdrew from the Iran nuclear deal in 2018 and began reimposing crippling sanctions. Biden has said he will prioritize a revival of the nuclear deal agreed between Tehran and world powers during Barack Obama's administration, in which Biden served as vice president. Yossi Kuperwasser, the former head of Israel's strategic affairs ministry, also tied the assassination to Biden's January 20 inauguration. Those responsible for the killing "had a short period of time to take action to weaken the Iranian nuclear program and to convince Biden that once he becomes president he should not return to the (nuclear) agreement," he said.
'Remember this name'
Israeli journalist Ronen Bergman, author of a 2018 book documenting Israel's covert assassination of its enemies over the years, said Sunday that such an attack, deep in enemy territory, "has to be planned for many months, if not for years." "It cannot be carried out merely by pressing a button," he added, writing in top-selling Israeli daily Yediot Aharonot. Bergman's piece highlighted Netanyahu's 2018 television appearance to announce that Israeli agents had penetrated a "secret atomic archive" in Tehran and removed tens of thousands of files proving its arms plans. Netanyahu said that Fakhrizadeh played a central role in those plans, adding "remember this name."Iran denies its nuclear program has a military purpose.
Retaliation 'postponed'
Rouhani stressed the country would seek its revenge for the attack in "due time" and not be rushed into a "trap." For Israel's former military intelligence chief, Amos Yadlin, Tehran was unlikely to respond immediately. "I think, in this case, since nobody took responsibility and it's part of the covert war, they might postpone retaliation until at least Trump's last day," Yadlin told journalists. Tehran could target Israeli scientists, use "proxies" like Lebanon's Hizbullah to attack Israel, "launch missiles from Iran," or target Israeli media, he said. Kuperwasser warned that Iran had "a wide variety of options" for retaliation and Israel needed to "be ready." "These are things that embarrass the Iranians and they have to make it clear that they will not live with these types of actions against their interest and retaliate in some type of way," he said. Local media said Israel had put its embassies abroad on heightened alert. Israeli Foreign Minister Gabi Ashkenazi was due this week to visit Bahrain, which has just normalized relations with Israel. But he has canceled the visit to the Gulf state, which like Iran is predominantly Shiite, diplomatic sources told AFP on Sunday. There was, however, no confirmation that Ashkenazi changed his plans in response to Fakhrizadeh's killing.

Iran Mulls Response as It Prepares to Bury Killed Nuclear Scientist
Agence France Presse/November 29/2020
Iran was weighing its response Sunday to the killing of its top nuclear scientist, which it blames on arch-foe Israel, as his body was taken to Shiite shrines ahead of being buried. Two days after Mohsen Fakhrizadeh died following a firefight between his guards and unidentified gunmen outside Tehran, parliament called in a statement for international inspectors to be barred from nuclear facilities. Iran’s Supreme National Security Council usually handles decisions related to the country’s nuclear program. President Hassan Rouhani has stressed the country will seek its revenge in "due time" and not be rushed into a "trap."Israel says Fakhrizadeh was the head of an Iranian military nuclear program, the existence of which the Islamic republic has consistently denied. His body arrived in the northeastern holy city of Mashhad late Saturday and was taken to the shrine of Imam Reza for prayers and a ceremonial circling of the tomb, state news agency IRNA reported. The they were taken Sunday to Fatima Masumeh's shrine in Qom, south of Tehran, and later to that of the Islamic republic's founder Imam Khomeini, according to Iranian media. Fakhrizadeh's funeral will be held Monday in the presence of senior military commanders and his family, the defense ministry said on its website, without specifying where.
Demands for 'strong reaction' -
Israel has declined to comment on Fakhrizadeh's killing, less than two months before US President-elect Joe Biden is set to take office following four years of hawkish foreign policy under President Donald Trump. Trump withdrew the U.S. from a multilateral nuclear agreement with Iran in 2018 and then reimposed and beefed up punishing sanctions as part of its "maximum pressure" campaign against Tehran. Biden has signaled his administration may be prepared to rejoin the accord, but the nuclear scientist's assassination has revived opposition to the deal among Iranian conservatives. On Sunday, Iran's parliament held a closed session to "investigate the assassination," ISNA news agency reported. Speaker Mohammad-Bagher Ghalibaf called Sunday for "a strong reaction" that would "deter and take revenge" on those behind the killing of Fakhrizadeh, who was aged 59 according to Iranian media. In an op-ed on Sunday, the ultraconservative Kayhan daily called for strikes on Israel if it is "proven" to be behind the assassination. It called for the port city of Haifa to be targeted "in a way that would annihilate its infrastructure and leave a heavy human toll". That will "certainly achieve deterrence, since the U.S. and the Zionist regime ... are in no way ready to fight a war," it added. The United States slapped sanctions on Fakhrizadeh in 2008 for "activities and transactions that contributed to the development of Iran's nuclear program." Almost a year after the US withdrawal, Iran responded by gradually abandoning most of its essential nuclear commitments under the deal. Iran's supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei called Saturday for Fakhrizadeh's killers to be punished. On Sunday, parliament said the "best response" to Fakhrizadeh's assassination would be to "revive Iran's glorious nuclear industry" by halting the voluntary implementation of the additional protocol, a document which under the 2015 accord prescribes more intrusive inspections of Iran's nuclear facilitates. In a statement following its meeting, the legislature said the killing showed that Israel, the U.S. and their allies had become "brazen" in their "terror and sabotage" against Iran.
'Mistrust' of inspectors -
Signed by all 290 members of parliament, the statement called for International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) inspectors to be barred from the country's atomic sites, said the legislature's news agency ICANA. Some MPs had earlier accused inspectors of acting as "spies" and potentially leading to Fakhrizadeh's death. But the spokesman for Iran's atomic energy organization, Behrouz Kamalvandi, told IRNA on Saturday that the issue of inspectors' access "must be decided on at high levels" of the Islamic republic's leadership.
Tehran representative Mahmoud Nabavian told Tasnim news agency inspectors should be barred "from interviewing experts and scientists, since our mistrust of the (IAEA)'s inspectors has been proven (to be correct)." "The enemy could have identified martyr Fakhrizadeh either through intelligence work or direct interviews," he added. Firebrand MP Javad Karimi Ghodousi, had on Friday accused Rouhani of setting up a meeting between Fakhrizadeh and IAEA officials in the past -- a claim strongly denied by the Rouhani administration.

Iran vows revenge after assassination of top nuclear scientist
Jerusalem Post/November 29/2020
Iran vowed revenge on Saturday for the assassination a day earlier of its top nuclear scientist, Mohsen Fakhrizadeh, raising the threat of a new confrontation between the Islamic Republic and the West with just over seven weeks left of US President Donald Trump’s term in office.
“Once again, the evil hands of global arrogance were stained with the blood of the mercenary usurper Zionist regime,” Iranian President Hassan Rouhani said. “Iran will surely respond to the martyrdom of our scientist at the proper time.” Head of Iran’s covert nuclear weapons program, Fakhrizadeh was shot and killed in Damavand, east of Tehran on Friday afternoon. Pictures from the scene showed two vehicles, one damaged in an explosion and another riddled with bullets in what appeared like a professional hit. Fakhrizadeh was a senior Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC) officer and headed Iran’s nuclear weapons project. He was a professor of physics at the Imam Hussein University in Tehran and was former head of Iran’s Physics Research Center (PHRC). He was the only Iranian scientist named in the IAEA’s 2015 “final assessment” of open questions about Iran’s nuclear program. It said he oversaw activities “in support of a possible military dimension to (Iran’s) nuclear program.” Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei pledged to continue the work of Fakhrizadeh, whom Western and Israeli governments have dubbed the Iranian version of Robert Oppenheimer, one of the heads of the Manhattan Project.
A military adviser to Iran’s Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei accused Israel of trying to provoke “a full-blown” war by killing Fakhrizadeh. “In the last days of the political life of their... ally (US President Donald Trump), the Zionists (Israel) seek to intensify pressure on Iran and create a full-blown war,” commander Hossein Dehghan tweeted. “We will strike as thunder at the killers of this oppressed martyr and will make them regret their action,” Dehghan wrote. Fakhrizadeh has been a target of interest for Israeli intelligence agencies for the last 15 years.
In 2018, at the unveiling of Iran’s secret nuclear archive acquired by the Mossad, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu mentioned Fakhrizadeh and said: “remember that name, Fakhrizadeh.” The files retrieved by the Mossad focused on Iran’s weapons program known as “Project Amad,” which was led by Fakhrizadeh. When Iran entered the 2015 nuclear deal, it denied that such a program existed. In 2003, Iran was forced to shelve Project Amad, but not its nuclear ambitions. It split its program into an overt program and a covert one that continued the nuclear work under the title of scientific knowhow development, Netanyahu said at the time. It continued this work in a series of organizations, which in 2018 were led by SPND, an organization inside Iran’s Defense Ministry led by the same person who led Project Amad – Dr. Fakhrizadeh, Netanyahu said. Following Fakhrizadeh’s assassination, Iran wrote a letter to UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres and the UN Security Council claiming “serious indications of Israeli responsibility” and that it reserves the right to defend itself. Guterres urged restraint. “We have noted the reports that an Iranian nuclear scientist has been assassinated near Tehran today. We urge restraint and the need to avoid any actions that could lead to an escalation of tensions in the region,” Guterres’ spokesman Farhan Haq said. The death of Fakhrizadeh has the potential to complicate efforts by US President-elect Joe Biden to revive the detente of Barack Obama’s presidency, and may lead to confrontation between Iran and its foes in the last weeks of Trump’s presidency. “Whether Iran is tempted to take revenge or whether it restrains itself, it will make it difficult for Biden to return to the nuclear agreement,” Amos Yadlin, a former Israeli military intelligence chief and director of Israel’s Institute for National Security Studies, wrote on Twitter. At least four scientists were killed between 2010 and 2012 in what Tehran said was a program of assassinations aimed at sabotaging its nuclear energy program. Iran has always denied pursuing nuclear weapons, saying its aims are only peaceful.
The United States deployed US aircraft carrier Nimitz with accompanying ships to the Gulf on Wednesday, shortly before the killing, but a US Navy spokeswoman said the deployment was not related to any specific threats. Germany also urged all sides to show restraint. “A few weeks before the new US administration takes office, it is important to preserve the scope for talks with Iran so that the dispute over Iran’s nuclear program can be resolved through negotiations,” a Foreign Ministry spokesman said.
“We therefore urge all parties to refrain from any steps that could lead to a further escalation of the situation.”

Former CIA official: Iranian scientist was irreplaceable
Aruth Sheva/November 29/2020
Former National Intelligence Manager for Iran says memory of Iranian nuclear program carried by scientist who was killed made him unique. Norman Roule, formerly National Intelligence Manager for Iran at the Office of the Director of National Intelligence in the US, spoke with Efi Triger on Galei Tzahal about the killing of senior Iranian scientist Muhsin Fahrizadeh, considered the father of Iran’s nuclear program. Roule would not comment on whether Israel and US were behind the killing. He emphasized, however, that Fahrizadeh was “definitely an irreplaceable individual” for Iran. Roule noted that although Fahrizadeh played no role in Iran’s civilian program, “the memory he carried of Iran’s weaponization program would make him unique in Iran itself. He also maintained close relations with Iran's Supreme Leader, NSC leadership and its ministry of defense. He understood the bureaucratic intricacies of a weaponization program.”Furthermore, “Much of the information on that program was taken by Israel when it uncovered a cache of secret documentation. So there may even be some things that only he would [have remembered] from the time of [Iran’s] covert weaponization program.”Citing the recent killings of Quds Force commander Qasem Soleimani and the number-2 official in Al-Qaeda, as well as Israel’s acquisition of secret nuclear documents and the recent series of unattributed explosions within Iran, Roule asserted that “Iran has a significant problem in its ability to hide its most dangerous officials, as well as a number of other individuals.”“Iran understands that there is little in the country that is secret or dangerous that cannot be addressed by foreign actors,” he added.

Iranian scientist's widow: He wanted to be a martyr, his wish came true
Aruth Sheva/November 29/2020
Widow of top Iranian scientist killed on Friday says death of her husband would spur a thousand others to take up his work. The widow of the Iranian nuclear scientist Muhsin Fahrizadeh killed on Friday said over the weekend that "he wanted to get martyred and his wish came true" as she appeared on state TV following his death, The Daily Mail reported. The unnamed widow said the death of her husband would spark a thousand others to take up his work. On Sunday morning, Norman Roule, formerly National Intelligence Manager for Iran at the Office of the Director of National Intelligence in the US, spoke with Efi Triger on Galei Tzahal about the killing of Fahrizadeh, considered the father of Iran's nuclear program, emphasizing that Fahrizadeh was “definitely an irreplaceable individual” for Iran. Roule noted that although Fahrizadeh played no role in Iran’s civilian program, “the memory he carried of Iran’s weaponization program would make him unique in Iran itself. He also maintained close relations with Iran's Supreme Leader, NSC leadership and its ministry of defense. He understood the bureaucratic intricacies of a weaponization program.”Furthermore, “Much of the information on that program was taken by Israel when it uncovered a cache of secret documentation. So there may even be some things that only he would [have remembered] from the time of [Iran’s] covert weaponization program.”

Iran approves raising rate of uranium enrichment following killing of senior scientist
Aruth Sheva/November 29/2020
Iranian parliament approves raising the rate of uranium enrichment to 20%, sufficient for the construction of nuclear weapons.The National Security Committee of the Iranian parliament this morning, Sunday, approved raising the rate of uranium enrichment to 20%, a degree of enrichment sufficient for the construction of nuclear weapons. The committee decided to remove all restrictions and oversight of Iran's uranium enrichment program as per the nuclear deal with the six powers in 2015. According to Israel Hayom, a spokesman for the committee, MP Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf, announced after the vote: "I hope our decision will put an end to the nonsense and terrorism that our enemies are promoting." The move in Iran comes after the elimination on Friday of senior Iranian scientist Muhsin Fahrizadeh, considered a driving force behind Iran's nuclear weapons program.

Iranian official: The end of Israel is near
Aruth Sheva/November 29/2020
Iranian officials accuse Israel and the United States of being responsible for elimination of senior nuclear scientist in Tehran. Brig. Gen. Esmail Ghaani, Commander of the Quds Force of the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps, blamed Israel for the elimination of Iranian nuclear scientist Mohsen Fakhrizadeh. "The enemy (Israel) does not dare to wage war against Iran like men, but the end of Israel is approaching ... This assassination is one of the desperate attempts of the arrogant international thieves,” said Ghaani, according to the IRNA news agency. Iranian Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei stressed the importance of prosecuting those involved in the crime of eliminating the scientist. In a letter to the Iranian nation, Khamenei said the assassination was carried out by "criminal agents" and that Fakhrizadeh scientific way would continue even after his death. Iranian President Hassan Rouhani also blamed Israel (and the US) for the murder. Iran's enemies, stated Rouhani, know that the elimination of Fakhrizadeh will not stop Iran's scientific development but would increase its determination to continue his work. Iran has in the past claimed that Israel hires assassins to kill nuclear scientists throughout the Middle East. Between 2010 and 2012, four nuclear scientists were assassinated inside Iran and a fifth survived a bomb attack. The government in Iran has blamed the attacks on US, British and Israeli intelligence services.The US and Britain denied involvement, while Israel has not commented.

EU condemns elimination of Iranian scientist
Aruth Sheva/November 29/2020
EU says elimination of senior Iranian nuclear scientist Mohsen Fakhrizadeh is a "criminal act".The European Union on Saturday condemned the elimination of senior Iranian nuclear scientist Mohsen Fakhrizadeh. “This is a criminal act and runs counter to the principle of respect for human rights the EU stands for,” an EU Spokesperson for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy said in a statement. “The High Representative expresses his condolences to the family members of the individuals who were killed, while wishing a prompt recovery to any other individuals who may have been injured,” added the statement. “In these uncertain times, it is more important than ever for all parties to remain calm and exercise maximum restraint in order to avoid escalation which cannot be in anyone’s interest,” it concluded. Iran’s Foreign Minister, Mohammad Javad Zarif, said on Friday that there were “serious indications” that Israel was involved in the elimination of the top nuclear scientist and called on the international community to condemn the elimination. Meanwhile, three intelligence officials told The New York Times that Israel was behind the attack in which Fakhrizadeh was eliminated. Top Iranian officials have threatened to avenge the death of the scientist

J Street condemns killing of top Iranian nuclear scientist
Aruth Sheva/November 29/2020
J Street president defines assassination "an attempt to sabotage the ability of the incoming Biden administration to re-enter the JCPOA"
J Street President Jeremy Ben-Ami issued a statement in response to the assassination of senior Iranian nuclear scientist Mohsen Fakhrizadeh. "The assassination of a senior Iranian nuclear scientist appears to be an attempt to sabotage the ability of the incoming Biden administration to re-enter the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA)", Ben-Ami wrote, "as well as the chances of further diplomacy, either by limiting the political leeway of Iranian officials who want to restore the deal, or by triggering an escalation leading to military confrontation". Ben-Ami claims that "those who oppose the JCPOA will stop at nothing to kill the agreement once and for all, despite repeatedly being proven wrong about the deal’s success in blocking Iran’s paths to a nuclear weapon and the disastrous consequences of Donald Trump’s violation of the pact". "The facts speak for themselves", Ben-Ami continues, "Iran now has twelve times as much enriched uranium as when Trump took office. Its forces have openly launched missiles at US troops. The Iranian people — suffering cruel sanctions in the midst of a pandemic — blame the United States rather than their own government’s hardliners for their predicament".
The J Street president says that "thankfully, change is on the way", but states that for President-elect Biden to have a real opportunity to restore and build on the JCPOA, "others must step up in the remaining weeks of the defeated Trump administration". "We call on Congress to make clear that it supports diplomacy as the primary means to address threats emanating from Iran", Ben-Ami concludes, "beginning with the restoration of the JCPOA. We call on our allies around the world to seek calm and refrain from any actions that would further escalate tensions. We call on the Iranian government not to respond to the provocation of the assassination, and exercise restraint in anticipation of responsible, competent American leadership again being in place".
 

Report: Saudi Crown Prince delayed Israel deal because of US election results

Aruth Sheva/November 29/2020
Officials say Saudi Crown Prince pulled back from normalization with Israel in part because of US election results. Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman pulled back from a normalization deal with Israel largely because of the US election result, Saudi advisors and US officials told The Wall Street Journal. Saudi aides said the prince, eager to build ties with the incoming administration of President-elect Joe Biden, was reluctant to take the step now, when he could use a deal later to help cement relations with the new American leader. Other factors played a role in Prince Mohammed’s decision, the officials told The Wall Street Journal. The crown prince and his father, 84-year-old King Salman, are still divided over how to address the issue of Palestinian Arabs who are seeking their own state. Saudi royal advisers said he was aware of his son’s talks with Israel but that his poor health prevented him from grasping the full extent of the discussions.“Saudi Arabia is trying to figure out how best to use this to repair its image in Washington and generate goodwill with Biden and Congress,” one of the US officials said. The report follows Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu’s secret visit to Saudi Arabia this past week, where he reportedly met the Saudi Crown Prince. An unnamed senior Saudi official told The Wall Street Journal after the meeting that Netanyahu and the Saudi Crown Prince discussed the possibility of normalizing relations between their two countries but did not reach a substantial agreement. Saudi officials have repeatedly stressed that while the country backs full normalization with Israel, but a peace deal with the Palestinian Authority that results in a Palestinian state must come first.

 

Ethiopia: Military Operation in Tigray Region Over, Hunt for Tigray Leaders Begins
Asharq Al-Awsat/Sunday, 29 November, 2020 - 11:00
The Ethiopian government launched a manhunt on Sunday for leaders of a rebellious faction in the northern region of Tigray after announcing federal troops had taken over the regional capital and military operations were complete.  Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed government has been trying to quell a rebellion by the Tigray People's Liberation Front (TPLF), a powerful ethnically-based party that dominated the central government from 1991 until Abiy came to power in 2018. He said on Saturday evening federal troops had taken control of the Tigrayan capital Mekelle within hours of launching an offensive there, laying to rest fears of protracted fighting in the city of 500,000 people. The prime minister, who refers to the three-week-old conflict as an internal law and order matter and has rebuffed international offers of mediation, said federal police will try to arrest TPLF "criminals" and bring them to court.
However, TPLF leader Debretsion Gebremichael told Reuters in a text message on Saturday evening that TPLF forces would fight on, raising the prospect that the conflict could drag on. Thousands of people are believed to have been killed and nearly 44,000 have fled to Sudan since the fighting began on Nov. 4. The conflict has been another test for Abiy, who took office two years ago and is trying to hold together a patchwork of ethnic groups that make up Ethiopia's 115 million people. The flow of refugees and attacks by the TPLF on neighboring Eritrea have also threatened to destabilize the wider Horn of Africa region. Claims from all sides are difficult to verify since phone and internet links to Tigray have been down and access tightly controlled since the fighting began. The police late on Saturday issued arrest warrants for 17 more military officers charged with crimes in connection with the conflict that include treason and embezzlement of public properties, state-affiliated Fana TV reported. They add to the 117 warrants issued for senior military officers it says are connected to TPLF since the conflict broke out. It was not clear if any TPLF leaders had surrendered, their whereabouts or their next plans. "Their brutality can only add (to) our resolve to fight these invaders to the last," the TPLF's Debretsion told Reuters in a text message on Saturday. Asked by Reuters if that meant his forces would continue fighting, he replied: "Certainly. This is about defending our right to self-determination."Debretsion said in another text message that Tigrayan forces were withdrawing from around Mekelle.
History of resistance
Regional diplomats and experts have warned that a rapid military victory might not signal the end of the conflict. The TPLF has a history of guerrilla resistance. Tigray's mountainous terrain and borders with Sudan and Eritrea helped the TPLF during its long struggle against Marxist ruler Mengistu Haile Mariam, whom it eventually toppled in 1991. The TPLF and Eritrean forces fought together against Mengistu, but relations later soured after Eritrea became independent in 1993. The two nations fought over a border dispute in 1998-2000 and the TPLF sees Eritrea as a mortal enemy. Eritrea signed a peace deal with Abiy in 2018, and the prime minister won the Nobel Peace Prize last year.
Explosions in Eritrea’s capital
Six explosions were reported in the Eritrean capital, Asmara, on Saturday night, the US State Department said, although it was not immediately clear if they were related to the Tigray conflict. The State Department post did not mention the cause or location of the explosions. Tigrayan forces fired rockets at Eritrea on Nov. 14. Reuters was unable to reach the Eritrean government or Tigrayan forces for comment. The TPLF, which denounces Abiy's warm relations with Eritrea, has accused Eritrea of sending troops to Tigray to join the Ethiopian government's fight. It has not been possible to contact the Eritrean government for comment on this. The TPLF also accuses Abiy of wanting to centralize control at the expense of Ethiopia's 10 regions. The constitution grants the regions wide-ranging powers over matters like taxation and security. Abiy has denied he wants to centralize power. This year, Abiy postponed elections scheduled for August to next year because of the COVID-19 pandemic. Calling this a power grab, the TPLF held its own regional elections in September and announced it no longer recognized federal authority. Abiy's government declared the Tigray election illegal.
 

Afghan Officials Say 34 Killed in Separate Suicide Bombings
Asharq Al-Awsat/Sunday, 29 November, 2020
At least 34 people were killed on Sunday in two separate suicide bombings in Afghanistan that targeted a military base and a provincial chief, officials said. There were no immediate claims of responsibility for the attacks, which took place as Afghan government representatives and the Taliban hold face-to-face talks in Qatar for the first time to end the country’s decades-long war. In eastern Ghazni province, 31 soldiers were killed and 24 others wounded when the attacker drove a military humvee full of explosives onto an army commando base before detonating the car bomb, according to an official in Afghanistan’s National Security Council, who spoke anonymously because he was not permitted to speak directly to the media. Ghazni's provincial health department chief, Zahir Shah Nikmal, also confirmed the death toll and casualty figures from the attack. Afghanistan's Defense Ministry released a statement claiming 10 soldiers were killed and nine wounded. The ministry also offered a different account of what happened than the official at the National Security Council, saying the vehicle exploded near the army base after security forces opened fire on the car. It was not immediately clear why there was a discrepancy. Interior Ministry spokesman Tariq Arian said a suicide bombing took place, though he did not provide further details. The soldiers stationed at the base were responsible for conducting night raids, providing support to the army and police forces under siege, and taking part in large-scale operations against the Taliban and ISIS group in eastern and southern provinces of Afghanistan. The base is located in a desert region, about three miles (five kilometers) outside the city of Ghazni. Parts of the base and a nearby police building were partially destroyed by the powerful explosion. Windows were also blown out in buildings of the city near to where the bombing occurred. In southern Afghanistan, another suicide car bomber targeted the convoy of a provincial council chief in Zabul province, killing at least three people and wounding 21 others, including children, according to provincial spokesman Gul Islam Sial. The council chief, Attajan Haqbayat, survived Sunday's attack with minor injuries, although one of his bodyguards was among those killed, said provincial police spokesman Hikmatullah Kochai. There has been a sharp rise in violence this year and a surge of attacks by the Taliban against Afghanistan’s beleaguered security forces since the start of peace talks in September. There have also been deadly attacks this month claimed by ISIS militants in Afghanistan, including a horrific attack on Kabul University that killed 22 people, most of them students. The US, meanwhile, plans to withdraw an estimated 2,500 troops before the middle of January, leaving about 2,000 soldiers in Afghanistan as part of America’s longest war. Afghan officials, however, have expressed concerns that a rapid reduction in American troops could strengthen the negotiating position of the Taliban. The US has been pressing in recent weeks for a reduction in violence, while the Afghan government has been demanding a ceasefire. The Taliban have refused, saying a ceasefire will be part of negotiations, although the group have held to their promise not to attack US and NATO troops.
 

New Sanctions on Turkey for Violating Libya Arms Embargo
Berlin - Raghida Bahnam/Asharq Al-Awsat/Sunday, 29 November, 2020
A week has passed since the crisis of the Turkish ship that German troops tried to search on suspicion of carrying arms to Libya, but the crisis doesn’t seem to be abating. The European Union has satellite images as evidence on the ship’s involvement in breaching the arms embargo on Libya.
EU-Irini military analysts had previously spotted military aircraft being unloaded in the Libyan port of Misrata in satellite images, the German news magazine Der Spiegel reported. Suspicious cargo was again sighted in November while the ship was docked in the Turkish port of Ambarli, said the confidential EU report's authors. Although the Foreign Ministry in Ankara accused the EU of an “unacceptable” approach, the latter confirmed that there were enough reasons to inspect the ship. German media outlets quoted European officials as saying that they suspected Roseline-A and put it under surveillance. They added that the vessel has moved between Turkish and Libyan ports eight times since the beginning of the year. Der Spiegel reported that the EU countries are pushing for new sanctions against violators of the arms embargo on Libya, hinting at Turkey. The EU imposed sanctions on three companies – one Turkish, one Kazakh, and one Jordanian – for breaching the embargo. The European leaders are expected to call for sanctions, decrying Erdogan’s visit earlier this month to the breakaway Turkish Cypriot north of the island of Cyprus. The European Parliament adopted a resolution on the Cypriot coastal town of Varosha on Thursday, calling on the European Council to impose sanctions on Turkey.


The Latest LCCC English analysis & editorials from miscellaneous sources published on November 29-30/2020

L’Iran et le théâtre des ombres
Charles Elias Chartouni/November 29/2020
شارل الياس شرتوني: إيران ومسرح الظلال/29 تشرين الثاني/2020
http://eliasbejjaninews.com/archives/93025/charles-elias-chartouni-liran-et-le-theatre-des-ombres-%d8%b4%d8%a7%d8%b1%d9%84-%d8%a7%d9%84%d9%8a%d8%a7%d8%b3-%d8%b4%d8%b1%d8%aa%d9%88%d9%86%d9%8a-%d8%a5%d9%8a%d8%b1%d8%a7%d9%86-%d9%88/
L’assassinat de Mohsen Fakhrizadeh, coordinateur du programme nucléaire iranien, déploie une des figurations de la guerre des ombres qui oppose l’Iran aux USA et Israël suite à la répudiation unilatérale actée par l’administration Trump ( 8 mai, 2018 ), à la relance du programme de recherches nucléaires à visée militaire, et aux affrontements alternés qui leur ont succédées. Contrairement à l’impression communément relayée par l’Iran et certaines mouvances de la gauche, le côté ombrageux de cet accord, laborieusement négocié par l’administration Obama et le tandem Rouhani-Zarif au sein du régime iranien, n’a jamais été dissipé et a failli capoter bien avant l’accès de l’administration Trump. L’administration Obama a édicté des mesures de rétorsion financière à l’endroit de l’Iran, en vue de sanctionner sa duplicité, son louvoiement à l’égard des stipulations de l’accord, ses recherches et productions balistiques, et son instrumentalisation au profit d’une stratégie de sabotage et déstabilisation qui s’est étendue sur l’ensemble du Moyen Orient. L’esprit de l’accord a été déjoué en faveur d’une latitude manœuvrière qui a donné lieu à une politique de subversion tous azimuts, tout en laissant planer des doutes sur la nature de l’adhésion au présumé accord.
Les préalables à cet accord laissaient croire à une hypothétique normalisation du régime iranien, une intégration progressive aux normes de la communauté internationale, et une forme de desserrement à l’endroit des libertés publique et privée en Iran. Or il n’en était rien depuis le commencement, lorsque la démarche et les négociateurs ont été remis en question par les extrémistes du régime, et le processus n’a avancé que de manière cahotante et à coup de compromis boiteux entre les différents fiefs d’une révolution islamique dépouillée de toute légitimité démocratique. Du côté américain, les querelles de l’investiture démocratique n’ont pas tardé, au lendemain de l’élection de Donald Trump, à exhiber leurs contradictions, et monter en épingle les divergences de scénarios en matière de politique étrangère peu soucieuse de consensus, alors que l’Iran offrait, en l’occurrence, le point de cristallisation de la nouvelle guerre froide dans ses versions interne et externe. Loin de céder à l’hypothèse d’une stratégie de changement de régime, comme le laissait entendre John Bolton, Donald Trump se rétracte de l’accord nucléaire négocié et finalisé par l’administration d’Obama, dont il cherchait à se démarquer ostensiblement, propose au régime iranien un accord global basé sur des stipulations stratégiques ( sécuritaire, économique, et politique ) qui n’ont eu, paradoxalement, aucun effet d’entraînement, à cause de la stratégie frontale de rupture adoptée par l’administration Trump, et ses effets contraignants à l’endroit d’un régime dont la survie est principalement due aux zones d’ombre qu’il s’est aménagé aux croisements des géopolitiques controversées d’un Moyen Orient éclaté.
Le complexe obsidional de l’Iran chiite en quête d’amarrages sécuritaires dont les contours s’alignent sur le tracé de la présence chiite au Moyen Orient, le récit d’une dystopie religieuse qui tient par les mythes d’une révolution islamique prématurément discréditée et la politique de répression sauvage à l’égard de toutes formes de dissidence, et par les avancées hasardeuses d’une politique d’expansion régionale qui a alimenté les entropies d’un ordre régional qui n’a jamais pu asseoir une légitimité politique normative, permettent d’établir les coordonnées d’une idéocracie en état de crise endémique. Les échecs d’une gouvernance idéologique inepte qui a failli dans tous les domaines de l’administration publique ( financière, économique, énergétique, sociale, urbaine, environnementale, sanitaire ,... il suffit de récapituler les indicateurs respectifs ), la loi d’airain de l’oligarchie religieuse, et la corruption systémique ont fini par écorner la légitimité d’un régime révolutionnaire qui prétendait au changement. La politique de nucléarisation ne se comprend qu’à la lumière de cette instabilité endémique à un régime qui n’a d’autre recours pour survivre, que la répression à l’intérieur et la déstabilisation à l’extérieur ( c’est la règle de survie de tous les régimes arabes ).
Le régime iranien, indépendamment, des alternances démocratiques aux États Unis et en Israël, est loin de pouvoir engager une politique de normalisation à l’extérieur, et de libéralisation à l’intérieur, car il entrevoit dans les deux cas, les prémisses de sa fin imminente. Le recours aux théories complotistes et aux anathèmes fortement prisés par les totalitarismes du siècle dernier, n’arriveront jamais à bout d’un échec patent, celui de l’idée et des schémas politiques de désastre qu’elle a pu inspirer. Les aléas d’une guerre à court de moyens, les failles sécuritaires évidentes d’un régime aux abois, les effets délétères d’une gouvernance publique entièrement faillie, les crises économique, sociale et environnementale, la gestion désastreuse des infrastructures nucléaires et de leurs doubles sécuritaire et stratégique, renvoient le régime iranien à ses scotomes idéologiques, aventures militaires hasardeuses, et politique de terreur comme équivalents fonctionnels à une stabilité aussi illusoire que convoitée. Les assassinats de l’architecte en chef du plan nucléaire, de Qassem Suleimani, d’Abou Mohammad al Masri un des chefs d’Al Qaida réfugié en Iran, le sabotage des installations nucléaires adjacentes à Natanz, et le vol des archives nucléaires, envoient un message prémonitoire à l’Iran: c’est soit la fin d’une ère et le commencement d’une nouvelle, ou la continuation d’un scénario de pourriture et de conflits ouverts que le babillage idéologique n’est plus en mesure de dissimuler.

 

A generation of fighters who died by the sword
Seth J. Frantzman/Jerusalem Post/November 29/2020
In some ways it is a tragedy that these men turned their fire and anger against Israel and the US.
There was a time when Hezbollah’s Hassan Nasrallah, his No. 2 Imad Mughniyeh and IRGC Quds Force leader Qasem Soleimani would sit together and feel safe. They were leading the “resistance” against Israel, and the Jewish state would soon be defeated, or so they believed. These men had come through the fire of the 1980s, the civil war in Lebanon, or the Iran-Iraq War, and they knew the privations of the past.
In some ways, it is a tragedy that they turned their fire and anger against Israel. These men, like nuclear scientist and general Mohsen Fakhrizadeh who was killed over the weekend, possessed qualities that surpassed others of their generation. They had legitimate grievances as well, coming from a time when Shi’ites were a suppressed minority and suffering the slaughter that Saddam Hussein’s regime and others had imposed.
However, they channeled their energy from those grievances to set their sights on the US, Israel and their partners in the region.
Arrogance led them to confront Israel and the US. This was born of the years in which terrorists could do as they pleased, bombing Jewish centers like the AMIA in Argentina, killing Jews at synagogues in Europe and being freed quickly by local authorities with a wink and a nod. After all, the Israeli Olympic team had been seen as a legitimate target by Palestinians, and most European countries and coffee-sipping Western diplomats had barely shed a tear.
Surely Hezbollah could stockpile rockets and threaten and kill as it pleased. Hezbollah’s narrative was that it was resisting Israeli occupation of southern Lebanon. Then when Israel left, the organization didn’t put down its arms with any kind of Good Friday Agreement, but planned more killing instead.
That was their mistake. In 2000 when the Second Intifada broke out these men could have channeled their resources elsewhere.
THEY BELONGED to the same generation. Mughniyeh was born in 1962 and died in 2008. A car bomb killed him in Damascus. Later reports at The Washington Post said the CIA and Mossad were behind it. Hezbollah vowed revenge.
Abu Mahdi al-Muhandis was born in 1954 in Basra, Iraq. An activist in the Dawa Party, he fled to Iran to fight alongside the IRGC against Saddam Hussein. He planned bombings of US and French embassies in Kuwait, and eventually came to lead Kataib Hezbollah, the Iraqi version of Hezbollah.
A deputy of the Popular Mobilization Units in Iraq he was a key part of Iran’s operations in the country and also played a role in defeating ISIS and supporting the Syrian regime, which in turn worked with Hezbollah. He was killed in January by a US airstrike after he went to Baghdad International Airport to greet Qasem Soleimani.
Soleimani was born in 1957 in Kerman, Iran. He was a fighter in the 1980s in the Iran-Iraq War and gained experience on the frontline and in suppressing Kurdish dissidents. He also was put in contact with foreign fighters, such as the Badr Brigade of Iraqis serving with the IRGC. This led him to command the Quds Force of the IRGC in the late 1990s, putting him in charge of foreign operations.
He became key to supporting Hezbollah and worked closely with Nasrallah and Mughniyeh, and also with Muhandis and Fakhrizadeh. They were a kind of brotherhood, and leaders of their generation in Iran. Men whose worldview was formed in the 1970s and who came of age during the Revolution in Iran. Now in their sixties, these men were at the pinnacle of achievement, before retirement. They didn't live to enjoy it, however: Soleimani was killed by a US drone strike with Muhandis in January.
Fakhrizadeh was born in Qom in 1958. Like Soleimani, he joined the IRGC after the revolution and grew up in its ranks. Photos now published online show him in the fatigues of the time, clearly an operator and later an officer, despite his ostensibly having a more technocratic role as head of the military industrial complex that was building Iran’s nuclear weapons. He was on America's radar by the early 2000s and spotlighted by sanctions: by the UN in 2011 and by Israel in 2018. He died in his car driving east of Tehran on November 27, 2020.
IT'S IMPORTANT to understand the generational aspect of these four men who were killed in assassinations. Two of them were killed by a US drone strike, and Iran and its allies have sought to blame Israel for the other two – although commentators have also suggested a US role.
What’s clear is that this is a generation of men who came to the pinnacle of achievement in their various roles: One in Lebanon, one in Iraq and two in Iran. This was the arc of Iranian influence, what some call the “Shia crescent” – a corridor of influence from Tehran to Beirut.
They are unique, and different from the Iranian-backed Shi’ites, because they knew each other and came of age during the same struggles. For Hezbollah, the struggle was against Israel in the 1980s, and to assert a muscular Shi’ite role in politics alongside Amal and other groups.
For the Iraqi Shi’ites, it was a struggle against Saddam – and later they had the good luck of having a US invasion topple Saddam and having Baghdad handed to them. All they had to do was go and vote, and demographics brought them to power.
The question was then whether to turn Iraq into a colony of Iran or make it a non-sectarian state. Muhandis chose to make Iraq a launchpad for Iranian ambitions in the region. Similarly, Hezbollah hijacked Lebanon, making it a tool for military power in the region.
And what of Fakhrizadeh? His goal was to give Iran a nuclear option by becoming a military nuclear power. This goal was slow – and it was slowed by various assassinations of other scientists and the Stuxnet computer virus.
Eventually, like his colleagues, he met with an explosion and died by the sword – the same sword that he and Mughniyeh, Soleimani and Muhandis had sought to unsheathe and wield against their enemies in Washington, Jerusalem and the Gulf.

 

Court Validates Child Rape: Persecution of Christians, October 2020
Raymond Ibrahim/Gatestone Institute./November 29, 2020
One of the men captured confessed that he was "promised a monthly 2000 dollar payment for fighting against 'kafirs' in Artsakh, and an extra 100 dollar for each beheaded "kafir." (Kafir, often translated as "infidel," is Arabic for non-Muslims who fail to submit to Islamic authority, which makes them enemies by default.) — Armen Press, November 1, 2020, Armenia/Azerbaijan/Turkey.
"It is not possible to get justice in this part of Somalia where almost everyone is a Muslim. We are being hunted down like wild animals because of putting our faith in Issa [Jesus]." — The father of a 7-year-old boy who was beaten and hospitalized, Morning Star News, October 30, 2020, Somalia.
"A sexual act with a minor is felony even if she is willing. The court has validated a rape despite the Sindh Child Marriage Restraint Act 2014 that punishes contractors of child marriage with up to three years' imprisonment.... What is the future of minority girls in Pakistan?" — Samson Salamat, the Christian chairman of an interreligious organization, Union of Catholic Asian News, October 28, 2020, Pakistan.
"As an Egyptian, I have rights—including the right to see my daughter and sit with her and make sure she is okay. If she wishes to follow another path [Islam], that is her right, but my right is to see her.... She is not some "chicken" I can forget about... As for the video, I am a father and know well how my daughter talks, and she [appeared] terrified... Is it that hard for the Egyptian police to return the girl?" — Coptic Solidarity, October 6, 2020, Egypt.
In Pakistan, Ali Azhar, 45, kidnapped, forcibly converted to Islam, and "married" Arzoo Raja, a 13-year-old Christian girl, on October 13. Despite the fact that sexual intercourse with girls under 16 is statutory rape and carries a minimum prison sentence of 10 years, the High Court of Sindh ruled in favor of the kidnapper on October 27. Pictured: The building of the Sindh High Court in Karachi, Pakistan. (Image source: A.Savin/Wikimedia Commons/WikiPhotoSpace)
The following are among the abuses that Muslims inflicted on Christians throughout the month of October 2020:
Slaughtered Christians and Terrorized Churches
France: On October 29, a Muslim man who wielded a knife entered the Notre Dame Cathedral of Nice and, while shouting "Allahu Akbar" ["Allah is greatest"], beheaded a Christian woman and stabbed two others to death. According to one report:
"Married Nadine Devillers, 60, was the first person attacked by Tunisian knifeman Brahim Aoussaoui, 21, who slit her throat near the baptismal font. After he tried to decapitate Devillers [other reports state the beheading was complete], Aoussaoui hacked 54-year-old sacristan Vincent Loques to death as he prepared for the first Mass of the day. Brazilian-born Simone Barreto Silva, 44, was then stabbed multiple times but managed to escape the church, running to a nearby burger bar where she succumbed to her injuries. The mother-of-three's last words to paramedics were: 'Tell my children that I love them'. On arrival, French police shot Aoussaoui 14 times as he screamed 'Allahu Akbar' ... a phrase he kept shouting even after being sedated and put into an ambulance."
According to an interview with his mother, the 21-year-old murderer had "start[ed] praying and taking his religion more seriously a few months ago." A Koran and several extra knives were found in his possession after the attack.
Hours after the attack, police shot and killed another man, who was also shouting "Allahu Akbar," while threatening passers-by with a handgun in Montfavet. Two weeks earlier, in Paris, an 18-year-old Muslim beheaded a teacher, Samuel Paty, for showing a cartoon of Muhammad as part of a discussion of freedom of expression in class.
Discussing the recent church attack, Nice's mayor, Christian Estrosi, said "Enough is enough. It's time now for France to exonerate itself from the laws of peace in order to definitively wipe out Islamo-fascism from our territory." France's Interior Minister Gerald Darmanin said that France was "at war with Islamist extremism... an enemy that is both internal and external."
Democratic Republic of Congo: On October 28, Islamic militants raided a village where they slaughtered at least 18 people "in an atrocious way," and torched their church to the ground. "It really creates pain in our hearts, a total panic in the village," said a local official. "We don't know if tomorrow the ADF will come back here again." ADF is an acronym for the Allied Democratic Forces, "an Islamist militant group" which has been terrorizing the Christian-majority nation and slaughtering Christians for more than two decades.
Armenia/Azerbaijan: Armenian churches that have come under Azerbaijani control have been desecrated — despite promises from the authorities to protect them. In one instance, a soldier — unclear whether an Azeri or a jihadi mercenary from Syria or Iraq — was videotaped triumphantly shouting "Allahu Akbar!" while standing atop a church chapel where the cross had apparently been broken off.
Days earlier, on October 8, the Azerbaijani forces shelled and destroyed Holy Savior, an iconic Armenian cathedral in Shusha that was "consecrated in 1888 but was damaged during the March 1920 massacre of Armenians of the city by Azerbaijanis and experienced a decades-long decline."
Syria: An unknown person hurled a grenade at an Armenian church in Hasakh; two people were injured. No group claimed the attack. Arguing that "Armenians have always been targeted in the region," the report elaborated:
"In November of 2019, Armenian priest Hanna Ibrahim, and his father Ibrahim Hanna Bido were shot and killed by sleeper-cells on their way from Hasakah to Deir al-Zor in order to restore the Armenian memorial church in Deir al-Zor... This is a clear example of extremists groups specifically targeting religious Armenian figures and sites. That being said, the recent conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan is likely to give added fuel to the fire when it comes to persecution of Armenians. Especially when you consider the claims that Turkish-backed Syrian rebel groups are being sent to Azerbaijan."
Austria: On October 29, a Muslim mob consisting of some 50 people entered and rioted inside a church in Vienna while screaming "Allahu Akbar." Police, acting fast, managed to disperse the crowd — much of which had gathered around the baptismal font and confessionals — and made some arrests. Discussing this incident, Integration Minister Susanne Raab remarked: "Parallel societies are the breeding ground for violence. We have to fight every form of extremism and Islamism right from the start in order to prevent it from getting worse. It is good that the police intervened...."
Two days later, on October 31, a 25-year-old Afghan man stormed into St. Stephen's Cathedral where he started to cry out "Islamist slogans."
Italy: A "half naked," 25-year-old man of North African origin broke into and terrorized a convent for nuns. According to the October 3 report, the man shouted "Allahu Akbar" several times while breaking down the front door of the Heart of Jesus Convent in the historic center of Mazara del Vallo. On entering, he turned the rooms where the nuns live "upside down" and hurled some of their property outside a window. Luckily, the nuns were not in their rooms but rather eating in the refectory; they eventually fled and hid outside the building. Due to all the "bustle and screams," an Italian living near the convent alerted police, who arrested the man as he tried to flee the scene. The same report states that a few weeks earlier, another North African migrant created fear and panic in the streets of Ferrara, Italy, by screaming "Allahu Akbar" while pretending to be armed.
Mali: After spending nearly five years in captivity in an Islamic group, and after rejecting invitations to embrace Islam, Beatrice Stöckli, a Swiss missionary who had been evangelizing in Mali and assisting mostly women and children since 2000, was killed by her captors. This information was shared by another French charity worker, also abducted in 2016 but who did convert to Islam during her captivity, and was released on October 8. A later report offers more details:
"[Stöckli] was killed ... by members of the Islamist terrorist organisation Jama'at Nasr al-Islam wal Muslim (JNIM). An affiliate of al-Qaeda in Mali and West Africa, JNIM has been responsible for numerous attacks on Christians and Westerners since its formation in March 2017. Beatrice Stöckli was kidnapped by armed men from her home in Timbuktu in northern Mali in January 2016. She had been previously abducted in April 2012 and endured nine days of torture and threats at the hands of jihadist group, Ansar al-Dine, before she was freed. On her release, she decided to return to Timbuktu to continue her missionary work."
Armenia/Azerbaijan/Turkey: Although the region of Nagorno-Karabakh is ethnically Armenian, it was allotted to Azerbaijan after the dissolution of the USSR, causing problems ever since, and culminating in open war throughout October. Several reports and testimonials, one by an independent French journalist, confirmed that Turkey was funneling jihadi groups — including the pro-Muslim Brotherhood Hamza Division, which kept naked, sex slave women in prison — operating in Syria and Libya. Discussing why Turkey was so heavily involved, Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan said that Turkey had returned "to continue the Armenian Genocide."
Anti-infidel rhetoric and ideology also seem to have motivated the mercenaries funneled into this latest theater of war by Turkey. One of the men captured confessed that he was "promised a monthly 2000 dollar payment for fighting against 'kafirs' in Artsakh, and an extra 100 dollar for each beheaded "kafir." (Kafir, often translated as "infidel," is Arabic for non-Muslims who fail to submit to Islamic authority, which makes them enemies by default.)
Attacks on Converts to Christianity
Iran: On October 14, Mohammad Reza Omidi (Youhan), a Christian convert, received 80 lashes for drinking wine, as part of holy communion. According to a report:
"It is illegal for Muslim Iranians to drink alcohol, but exceptions are made for recognised religious minorities, including Christians. However, Iran does not recognise converts as Christians. This lack of recognition is also the reason Youhan spent the last two years in prison and is now living in internal exile—because of his membership of a house-church, which is the only available Christian fellowship for converts in Iran."
This is not the first time Youhan was flogged. He first received 80 lashes, alongside another convert, in 2013, for the same "crime": sipping wine during communion.
Somaliland: During an October 5 press conference, a Somaliland police colonel announced that a husband and wife had been arrested for being "apostates and evangelists spreading Christianity." Police reportedly entered the couple's house after being alerted by "suspicious activities." On finding Christian materials inside their home, police apprehended and hauled away the couple, who have three children. During the same conference, the police colonel repeated that "whoever dares to spread Christianity in this region, should be fully aware that they won't escape the hand of the law enforcement officers and that the spread of Christianity will not be allowed and is considered blasphemy." He also encouraged citizens to report on those they suspected of being Christian.
Somalia: On October 9, Muslim youths beat and hospitalized the 7-year-old child of a Christian convert. "My son was attacked by three boys who beat him and injured his private parts," said the father, whose name is withheld. "He suffered a swollen and injured face as well as an injured left hand from a knife. My son lost a lot of blood and was rushed by one of the secret believers to a nearby dispensary in Dhobley." The father discussed how he and his family, which includes five children, have been on the run since 2012, when "Muslims [first] discovered my new faith in Christ." Early on, his wife also converted and, when her Muslim father learned of it, "He was so furious he forcefully entered into my room and destroyed some of my belongings, beddings and utensils. Then he turned to my wife and began slapping her and beat her with a stick, which led to a miscarriage of a 6-month fetus."
The wife's Muslim father seized his daughter, along with her husband's possessions, and went to a distant location. Years later, after the convert and his wife, who had remained Christian, were reunited, in November 2018, "my father-in-law and other Muslims organized to kill me while I was coming from the market. Three men stopped me and started beating me with sticks and blows. I became unconscious." In July 2019 his father-in-law again "entered my house and started quarreling and uttering abusive words and immediately began slapping her [his wife] in front of me, and then he took her away the second time and locked her in his house while she was eight months pregnant." The husband reported the abduction and police eventually recovered his wife. "After three days, she gave birth. My father-in-law was locked down in the jail cell [in Kenya]. The Muslims threatened to kill me, so I requested the police to release him, which they did." The family has since still been on the run:
"It is not possible to get justice in this part of Somalia where almost everyone is a Muslim. We are being hunted down like wild animals because of putting our faith in Issa [Jesus]. Always our security is at stake. We need prayers and financial support for the treatment of my son."
General Hate for and Abuse of Christian Minorities
Pakistan: On October 13, Ali Azhar, 45, kidnapped, forcibly converted to Islam, and "married" Arzoo Raja, a 13-year-old Christian girl. On that same day, her parents registered a kidnapping case with local police. Two days later, on October 15, "we were summoned to the station," explained her father Raja Lal, "where we were shown documents which claimed that Arzoo was 18 and had willingly converted to Islam after marrying Ali Azhar." Despite the fact that the National Database and Registration Authority records Arzoo as being born on July 31, 2007 and is therefore 13-years-old, and despite the fact that sexual intercourse with girls under 16 is statutory rape and carries a minimum sentence of 10 years in prison in Pakistan, on October 27, the High Court of Sindh ruled in favor of the kidnapper/husband by relying on a Sharia stipulation that abrogates all the rules for those who convert to Islam. According to the court order,
"The petitioner [the 13-year-old] initially belonged to the Christian religion. However, after the passage of time, the petitioner understood and realized that Islam is a universal religion and she asked her parents and other family members to embrace Islam but they flatly refused. Subsequently she accepted the religion of Islam before the religious person of Madressah Jamia Islamia. After embracing Islam, her new name is Arzoo Faatima; per learned counsel, petitioner contracted her marriage to Azhar of her own free will and accord without duress and fear."
On hearing this decision, Rita Masih, the girl's mother — who was apparently banned from entering the courthouse and who, with her husband, had fallen at and "even touched the feet of police to meet their daughter" — cried for her daughter with open arms outside the courthouse: "Arzoo, come to your mama. He will kill you." She eventually fainted on the pavement. Earlier, when the girl saw and tried to go to her mother, her Muslim abductor/husband snatched and took her into the courtroom. Discussing this matter, Samson Salamat, the Christian chairman of an interreligious organization, stated how he felt about the position taken by the court:
"I am distressed and disappointed with the position taken by the honorable court. A sexual act with a minor is felony even if she is willing. The court has validated a rape despite the Sindh Child Marriage Restraint Act 2014 that punishes contractors of child marriage with up to three years' imprisonment. Can a judge, an army officer or a Pakistani politician tolerate handing over their minor daughter to a middle-aged man? What is the future of minority girls in Pakistan? Our courts favor the powerful. We still don't have strong calls from a joint minority platform on forced conversions."
This is the second recent forced conversion and marriage of an underage Christian girl just in Karachi. To justify marriage to Huma Younus — a 14-year-old Christian girl who was also abducted, forced to convert to Islam, and wed to a Muslim man — on February 3, 2020, the Sindh high court in Karachi ruled that men may marry underage girls once they have their period, in direct compliance with Islamic sharia law, but against Karachi's own laws. "Our daughters are insecure and abused in this country," Huma's mother later remarked. "They are not safe anywhere. We leave them at schools or home but they are kidnapped, raped, humiliated, and forced to convert to Islam."
Similarly, in August 2020, Maira Shahbaz, a 14-year-old Christian girl, escaped from the home of Mohamad Nakash — her kidnapper, whom the Lahore High Court had recently ruled is her legitimate husband despite her and her family's objections. She fled to a police station, where she gave testimony that included how she was being "forced into prostitution" and "filmed while by being raped," accompanied by threats that the video would be published unless she complied with the demands of her rapist/husband and friends. "They threatened to murder my whole family," the girl said. "My life was at stake in the hands of the accused and Nakash repeatedly raped me forcefully." She and her family are currently in hiding.
In a separate incident of "religious hatred" in Pakistan, a Muslim man and his son beat and humiliated a Christian woman in public for arguing with him. On October 12, Balqees Bibi, the Christian woman, called out in public to a relative — whose name is distinctly Christian — thereby angering Muhammad Abass Butt. "Abbas was [always] full of religious hatred against my mother," her son explained. "He often expressed his anger against Christians in the street, but everyone ignored him to avoid disputes." On that day, "Abbas started abusing my mother saying, 'Oh choori! Shut your mouth!' When she argued with him, he slapped her and dragged her into the street." The report adds:
"Abbas was angry that Bibi, a person he considered socially lower than him due to her religious identity, had argued with him in public. As Abbas beat Bibi, he also used an extremely derogatory slur for Christians which labels them as untouchables. After the attack, Bibi and her family registered a police complaint against Abbas (FIR # 372/20). However, there police have yet to arrest Abbas or his son who reportedly joined his father in beating Bibi."
Egypt: On October 3, Magda Mansur Ibrahim, a 20-year-old Christian, disappeared while traveling to her college. Three days after her parents contacted and pressured police and local officials to act, a video of the missing girl appeared on October 6. In it she claimed that she had secretly converted to Islam six years ago and had now married a Muslim man and therefore wished to be left alone. In an interview, however, her father said he was convinced that the video was made under duress. He also asked if it was reasonable to believe that a 14-year-old girl could be theologically attuned enough to secretly convert to and clandestinely practice Islam for six years within a Christian household. Moreover, "How am I to believe," the girl's father inquired, "this video when Rania 'Abd al-Masih and the Alexandrian girl [Christine Zarif] both previously published similar videos and in the end they returned and we learned that they had acted under pressure?" (The statement is a reference to two other Christian women in Egypt who, after disappearing, also reappeared on videos as eager converts to Islam, while the truth — that the videos were made under duress — came out only later.) Magda's father then made an impassioned plea:
"As an Egyptian, I have rights—including the right to see my daughter and sit with her and make sure she is okay. If she wishes to follow another path [Islam], that is her right, but my right is to see her .... I therefore ask State Security, the Minister of Interior and President Sisi to look into [the plight of] my daughter because I know that she is not safe and is under pressure. I will never forfeit my daughter .... She is not some "chicken" I can forget about; she is my flesh and blood.... I am poor and at death's door [literally, "God's door"], but ... even if they were to publish a million such videos, it is my right to see her. As for the video, I am a father and know well how my daughter talks, and she [appeared] terrified and her face changed. As the very least reflection of my rights as a citizen, State Security should move and investigate [the whereabouts] of my daughter. Is it that hard for the Egyptian police to return the girl?"
A few days later, Magda was reported as having been returned to her family. However, and as with the case of Ranya 'Abd al-Masih, the 20-year-old's return seems to be conditioned on the family not asking questions, speaking to the press, filing criminal charges, or even knowing who the responsible parties are.
In a separate incident in Egypt, on October 5, Muslim mobs attacked Christian homes and beat their inhabitants in the village of Dabous in Samalout. "The cause of the story," explained Mina, a Christian resident, occurred two days earlier, when "two Muslim men who don't belong to our village beat a young Coptic kid [aged 10]. The Coptic men didn't accept that," and a fight erupted: Muslims — and their dignity — were injured. Two days later, "retaliatory" attacks began with one Muslim man striking a Christian father and his son with a hose while they were traveling on motorbike; they fell and were injured. By the end of that day, on October 5, "all of the Muslims gathered to beat the Copts," said Mina. "They damaged the windows and doors, and injured around five or six persons." Another local Christian man described the incident:
"The attack started with a Muslim woman screaming. The extremists attacked the Copts' houses, [even though] there were security bodies whose job it is to protect the church. They did not call the police, but the Copts did. Then the police came, and the extremists escaped to the farms and grass."
While discussing how a car belonging to a Christian man was destroyed, Mina said that Muslims in the village had promised to make amends, and that "my father has gone to the police station to follow the situation, but I will stay home. They are treacherous and traitorous."
*Raymond Ibrahim, author of Crucified Again and Sword and Scimitar, is a Distinguished Senior Fellow at the Gatestone Institute, a Shillman Fellow at the David Horowitz Freedom Center, and a Judith Rosen Friedman Fellow at the Middle East Forum.
About this Series
While not all, or even most, Muslims are involved, persecution of Christians by extremists is growing. The report posits that such persecution is not random but rather systematic, and takes place irrespective of language, ethnicity, or location.
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.

France must reconnect with its citizens of Arab origin

Faisal J. Abbas/Arab News/November 29/ 2020
More than ever, France is at the heart of the discussion. Regardless of its colossal internal challenges, ranging from a weakening economy amid the pandemic to the necessity of achieving the much-contested reforms needed to put the state’s finances back on track, President Emmanuel Macron has undertaken a 180-degree shift in priorities that very sadly lifted France to the top of the news headlines during the past two months.
Amid the trials taking place in Paris for the 2015 terrorist attacks came three major attacks that shook not only France but the whole international public opinion. The non-orchestrated attacks that happened within less than 35 days of each other had in common the re-publication of the offensive caricatures of the Prophet Muhammed by the very controversial satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo. The beheading of schoolteacher Samuel Paty in Conflans-Sainte-Honorine and the Nice attacks share the same horrifying style.
Beyond the normal scenes of solidarity a nation witnesses in the aftermath of humanly shocking events, the fall of 2020, which has seriously wounded France, will also be remembered as a time when the very old and constantly adjourned debate on minorities and integration re-emerged in a very passionate and polarized social and political context. Since its launch in July 2020, Arab News en Français has been part of the broader Arab News journey of pushing the boundaries of journalism and creating better understanding. At Arab News, we are nurturing this culture of walking the extra mile to get closer to our audience by providing our readers with better insights and more credible research.
Our initiative of tackling the issue of integration by conducting a survey on the perceptions that French citizens of Arab origin have of their life in France was launched a few weeks before the last wave of attacks.
While we tend to think that young generations of French Arabs born in France are more integrated than their elders, our survey shows the contrary: Young generations have a strong desire to connect with their ancestral roots, while the older ones are more attached to the values of the French republic.
The unfolding of the events and their consequences were simply a confirmation that we are not only looking in the right direction, but also pointing to the real problems. Backed up with real data, we hope to contribute to rationalizing what appears to become a highly emotional debate on minorities, religion and integration. The results of the survey conducted for Arab News en Français by YouGov clearly show that the majority of French people of Arab and Muslim descent broadly consider themselves as integrated. They describe themselves as French citizens who adhere to the values of the republic. The study, however, concludes that in terms of perception, there is a certain level of stigmatization within this community, which constitutes France’s largest minority.
This is exactly where the most important question comes into play: Is integration in France a systemic problem or a perception issue? No matter how many answers and opinions there are on this complicated question, the consequences of its constant pertinence are here to stay, at least until further notice. Religion is a main factor, and it is not exclusive to Islam. According to our survey, Jews of Arab descent also believe their religion might be a social obstacle, while Christians of Arab descent do not share the same sentiment. Being decades old, the unresolved integration debate appears to have a different impact on different generations and results in an apparent generational gap, according to our study.
While we tend to think that young generations of French Arabs born in France are more integrated than their elders, our survey shows the contrary: Young generations have a strong desire to connect with their ancestral roots, while the older ones are more attached to the values of the French republic.
If this is to be used as an indicator, it surely points towards an endemic social exclusion problem that no French government has managed to resolve yet. It also leads us to believe that this generational gap comes with a communication gap between French institutions and a large part of the young French generations.As long as the youth are not heard, they will not listen. In today’s widely open social media landscape, experience — from Daesh recruitment campaigns to the Nice decapitations — has proven that no establishment can afford the consequences of losing the attention of younger audiences. France, now is the time to reconnect.
• Faisal J. Abbas is the editor in chief of Arab News. Twitter: @FaisalJAbbas

France would not be France without Arab, Muslim contribution

Ludovic Pouille/Arab News/November 29/ 2020
At a time when France has once again been struck by terrorism and targeted by a hateful online campaign instigated by those claiming the country is Islamophobic, it is necessary to reiterate some facts.
France has the utmost respect for Islam, a religion with which it has deep historical and cultural ties. France does not, and will never, confuse Islam with terrorism. On the one hand, we must all fight together to defeat terrorism in all its forms. On the other, we must fight extremist tendencies and radical ideologies. This is a battle we must fight alongside Muslims, who are the primary victims of terrorism.
Islam is France’s second-largest religion. As reaffirmed by the Minister of Foreign Affairs, Jean-Yves Le Drian, the millions of Muslims in France rightfully belong to our national community. This should never be questioned. Muslims in France benefit, within the free exercise of their religion, from a protective framework that we enforce in a spirit of equality among all religious denominations.
Here are the facts. In France today, there are 3,000 places of worship for Muslims, state television broadcasts an Islam-related show every week as part of an evening devoted to religions and there are Muslim chaplains in the army and in hospitals.
Public authorities maintain a close dialogue with representatives of all religions, including Muslim organizations that regularly reiterate the importance of all citizens respecting the laws of the Republic, regardless of their religion. This is what constitutes the foundation of the French nation.
We would not be what we are today without the immense contribution made by artists, intellectuals and creators from the Arab and Muslim world to our cultural heritage, who also contribute to the universal French melting pot.
Ludovic Pouille
With this in mind, we want imams who preach in France to be trained in France. In addition to religious studies, fluency in French and knowledge of the Republic’s fundamental principles should be part of this training.
As for foreign funding, we want it to be transparent in order for us to make sure that it is not the driver of a radical ideology or divisions within French society. Freedom, equality and fraternity are universal values. They are not the property of a state; it is up to each and every one of us to protect and promote them. We must foster dialogue to strengthen mutual respect.
Those are the principles upon which the democratic and secular model of our republic is built. By not pitting communities against one another, the French model seeks to be neutral and impartial and that is how it protects all of them. France has included equality in its motto and strives to ensure everyone’s differences are respected.
We are and will remain vigilant in the face of any hate speech or racism. While there may sometimes be tensions, our duty is to ease them. Discrimination and hate speech go against our values. Our duty is to sanction them and this is what we are doing.
Beyond the protective legal framework, I would like to recall some facts that I consider equally as fundamental.
France would not be France without Muslims. France’s cultural history would not have been the same without this centuries-old interaction with the Orient, which has always fascinated and inspired our authors, painters, scientists and architects.
We would not be what we are today without the immense contribution made by artists, intellectuals and creators from the Arab and Muslim world to our cultural heritage, who also contribute to the universal French melting pot.
As the French ambassador to Saudi Arabia, I will continue to strongly promote intercultural dialogue between our two societies, between the youth of both countries in particular, in an environment characterized by mutual respect and a constant desire to understand one another because it is the responsibility of each and every one of us to follow the path of dialogue and tolerance.
• Ludovic Pouille is the French ambassador to Saudi Arabia. Twitter: @ludovic_pouille

Republican Senate should thwart US return to JCPOA
Dalia Al-Aqidi/Arab News/November 29/ 2020
As former Vice President Joe Biden begins his transition into the White House ahead of January’s inauguration day, he seems determined to begin his four-year legacy by revising substantial decisions made by his predecessor, President Donald Trump.
On May 8, 2018, Trump announced one of the most significant decisions of his presidency: Terminating the US participation in the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA) with Iran and reimposing sanctions that had been lifted under the 2015 deal, which was reached during former President Barack Obama’s time in office.
When you search Google for “Obama and the JCPOA,” the first result that appears is a link to Obama’s White House archive with the title, “The Historic Deal That Will Prevent Iran from Acquiring a Nuclear Weapon.” Indeed, the agreement was historic and important to its primary beneficiary, the clerical regime in Tehran.
The JCPOA — also known as the Iran nuclear deal — empowered Iran’s ambitions for regional dominance and led to the removal of the name of Qassem Soleimani, then-commander of the Quds Force of Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, from the UN sanctions list.
Under the agreement, Tehran gained the resources to rebuild its arsenal, sponsor terrorism, and carry out attacks against the US and its allies through proxy militias in the region. Moreover, the Obama administration shipped $1.7 billion in cash to Iran in exchange for four American citizens who were being held hostage by the regime.
The deal did not stop the Iranian ballistic missile program and did not prevent rockets from targeting US troops in Iraq or falling into Israel.
You may or may not agree with Trump’s foreign policy, but the president's decision to withdraw from the infamous deal was brave and necessary for US national security, as well as for the protection of its allies in the Middle East.
When the Democrat House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, progressive Sen. Elizabeth Warren, and Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison expressed their outrage and disapproval of this move, it meant that Trump’s decision was a victory for the US and the Middle East over the repressive and malign Iranian regime.
Trump’s decision to withdraw from the infamous deal was brave and necessary for US national security.
Biden’s introduction of his first slate of picks for key Cabinet posts sends a clear signal that America is getting ready for a third term of Obama’s foreign policy. Several of them have been associated with Obama, former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, former President Bill Clinton or Biden himself. Names like Antony Blinken for secretary of state, Alejandro Mayorkas for secretary of homeland security, and Jake Sullivan for national security adviser remind us of the failed policies regarding Iran, Iraq, Daesh, Libya and China.
During his presidential election campaign, Biden continued to criticize his predecessor’s policy on Iran, implying that his administration would favor a return to the JCPOA, which is what the Democrats would like him to do.
Technically, it is not up to the Biden administration whether to go back to the negotiating table without the inclination of the Iranian side. However, the former vice president wrote in September that he would offer Tehran a credible path back to diplomacy. “If Iran returns to strict compliance with the nuclear deal, the United States would rejoin the agreement as a starting point for follow-on negotiations,” he emphasized.
The good news is that Iran will be holding its own presidential elections in June 2021, ending President Hassan Rouhani’s second term, which would limit the time available for the two leaders to make any significant progress. With that in mind, the new government in Iran will most likely be more difficult to negotiate with.
The Republicans should never forget that, while the Democrats celebrated the death of Osama bin Laden, they strongly condemned the assassination of Soleimani. However, the latter was also a ruthless terrorist responsible for the deaths of hundreds of Americans and Israelis, in addition to his victims in Iraq, Syria, Lebanon and Yemen.
The Republicans need to understand that Iran would not accept new negotiations without compensation for its financial losses due to the sanctions that were implemented by the Trump administration. The Republicans should also closely monitor Iran’s illicit missile program and its terrorist tendencies.
A powerful Iran would be a clear and present danger to Israel and the Gulf states, and a major obstacle in the way of any future peace agreements between Israel and any other Arab countries.
Maintaining economic sanctions would weaken the iron fist of the ruling clerics and empower the Iranian people to revolt against this vicious totalitarian regime. A majority Republican Senate would play a vital role in limiting Tehran’s influence, protecting the interests of the US’ major allies in the region and, most importantly, maintaining the country’s national security.
*Dalia Al-Aqidi is a Senior Fellow at the Center for Security Policy. She is a former Republican congressional candidate. Twitter: @DaliaAlAqidi

Iran’s economy will continue to struggle during Biden presidency

Dr. Majid Rafizadeh/Arab News/November 29/ 2020
Some politicians, scholars and policy analysts believe Iran’s economy might rebound after Joe Biden moves into the White House in January. The argument goes that President-elect Biden will rejoin the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA), also known as the Iran nuclear deal, meaning funds will flow back into the treasury of the Iranian regime, just as they did in 2015.
However, Iran’s situation is more complicated now and, due to several critical factors, its economy is less likely to rebound to the high levels seen after the nuclear deal was first struck. After the JCPOA was reached between the P5+1 world powers and Tehran, the Iranian leaders enjoyed a free ride in the global financial system, not just because of the nuclear deal but also because they promised the major global financial institutions that they would strengthen the country’s anti-money laundering and anti-terrorism financing rules. Iran pledged to implement the Financial Action Task Force’s (FATF) 10 reforms in order to bring its national laws against money laundering and the financing of terrorism in line with global standards. As a result of that promise, financial restrictions were removed and the nuclear deal facilitated the flow of additional international revenues, foreign trade, business dealings, and financial capital.
The Iranian leaders’ promises to FATF and other major global financial institutions were a collection of words rather than action, with Iran having not acted on all of the 10 reforms. As the Iranian regime continued its funding for terror groups and money laundering, the Paris-based FATF, which monitors money laundering across the world, in 2018 gave Tehran a deadline to carry out the reforms it promised. Marshall Billingslea, the US assistant secretary for terrorist financing, who presided over the FATF at the time, warned Tehran: “We expect Iran to move swiftly to implement the commitments that it undertook at a high level so long ago. In line with that, we expect that it will have adopted all of these measures by February. If, by February 2019, Iran has not yet done so, then we will take further steps.” The director of communications at the International Monetary Fund, Gerry Rice, also urged Iran to strengthen its anti-money laundering and anti-terrorism financing rules by the February 2019 deadline.
It was not surprising that Iran did not halt its money laundering and terrorism financing. In February this year, the FATF’s patience with the Iranian leaders was over and the global watchdog placed Tehran on the terrorism financing blacklist, stating that, “given Iran’s failure to enact the Palermo and Terrorist Financing Conventions in line with the FATF Standards, the FATF fully lifts the suspension of counter-measures and calls on its members and urges all jurisdictions to apply effective counter-measures.”
Even if the Biden administration rejoins the nuclear deal, many companies and financial institutions will be reluctant to deal with Iran.
It follows that, even if the Biden administration rejoins the nuclear deal, many companies and financial institutions will be reluctant to deal with Iran. That is why, when 15 countries, including Iranian ally China, this month signed one of the world’s largest free trade agreements, Tehran was not included. Even Iranian state-controlled newspaper Asr-e-Eghtesad acknowledged: “Due to Iran’s non-membership in reputable and powerful organizations such as Shanghai, Iran’s economy has benefited less from the benefits of globalization and international relations. This issue has made many foreign investors reluctant to enter the Iranian market.”
Another Iranian newspaper, Otagh-e-Iran, also pointed to the importance of the FATF in March. It wrote: “Failure to cooperate with the FATF will result in the isolation of the country in question. In the case of Iran, these consequences will be twofold. Because Iran’s economy is not in a normal situation. Unprecedented economic instability and the return of sanctions against Iran, along with financial isolation due to non-cooperation with the Financial Action Task Force, will bring a new shock to the country that the economic strength will not be tolerated.”
The second reason Iran’s economy will struggle to bounce back is its ongoing currency crisis. It is unrealistic to think that Iran’s currency, the rial, which is now trading now at about 250,000 to the dollar, will return to its 2015 value of 25,000 to the dollar. Historically, currencies do not see a 10-fold increase in valuation in just a few years.
More fundamentally, Iran’s currency crisis is not squarely related to the nuclear deal. The rial has been declining ever since the establishment of the regime in 1979 and it continued to fall even at the time of the nuclear agreement. In 1979, one US dollar was worth 70 rials; about 10 years later it was roughly equal to 800 rial; in the year 2000, it was worth about 7,000 rials; in 2010, the currency’s value declined to 20,000 rials to the dollar; and now it is hovering at about 250,000. This shows that Iran’s currency has lost almost 10 times its value every decade regardless of who is in the White House. The reasons for this staggering fall include the systemic mismanagement of the economy, financial corruption among officials and their connections, and the squandering of the nation’s wealth on supporting terror groups and proxies across the region rather than improving the economy and creating jobs.
This shows that the Iranian regime’s economy will continue to struggle even if Biden does rejoin the nuclear deal.
*Dr. Majid Rafizadeh is a Harvard-educated Iranian-American political scientist. Twitter: @Dr_Rafizadeh