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

#elias_bejjani_news
 

The Bulletin's Link on the lccc Site
http://data.eliasbejjaninews.com/eliasnews21/english.april30.21.htm

 

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

 

Bible Quotations For today

When reviled, we bless; when persecuted, we endure; when slandered, we speak kindly
First Letter to the Corinthians 04/09-16: “For I think that God has exhibited us apostles as last of all, as though sentenced to death, because we have become a spectacle to the world, to angels and to mortals. We are fools for the sake of Christ, but you are wise in Christ. We are weak, but you are strong. You are held in honour, but we in disrepute. To the present hour we are hungry and thirsty, we are poorly clothed and beaten and homeless, and we grow weary from the work of our own hands. When reviled, we bless; when persecuted, we endure; when slandered, we speak kindly. We have become like the rubbish of the world, the dregs of all things, to this very day. I am not writing this to make you ashamed, but to admonish you as my beloved children. For though you might have ten thousand guardians in Christ, you do not have many fathers. Indeed, in Christ Jesus I became your father through the gospel. I appeal to you, then, be imitators of me.”

Titles For The Latest English LCCC Lebanese & Lebanese Related News & Editorials published on April 29-30/2021

Vaccination an Uphill Battle in Lebanon, Abiad Says
Aoun Reminds BDL of Deadline to Submit Financial Audit Files
President Aoun stresses support for work of National Commission for Missing and Forcibly Disappeared
France to bar entry to some Lebanese officials hindering progress
Bassil Urges Lavrov to Press Hariri on Government
Fahmi Expresses Gratitude to Saudi Arabia over Stuck Trucks
Saudi ban on Lebanese produce adds pressure on country’s economic crisis
Report: Halted Sea Border Talks Likely to Move ahead
Israel, Lebanon aim to restart maritime border talks
Report: Diab Disapproves Lifting Subsidies before Food Ration Cards
U.S. Embassy Trains Lebanese Judges and Prosecutors through ABA
Polluted Lake Qaraoun Spews Out Tons of Dead Fish
FPM Youth calls EU to help investigate money transfers from Lebanon
German Ambassador to Lebanon visits historical buildings saved by Germany and UNESCO under Li Beirut initiative
The Beirut port explosion: a geoscience study by Dr. Tony Nemer
World should not overlook Hezbollah’s illegal activities/Khaled Abou Zahr/Arab News/April 29/2021
Hezbollah exported drugs, weapons, with Lebanon government knowledge/Hudhaifa Ebrahim/Media Line/April 29/2021
Why Beirut Beckons/Michael Young/Carnegia MEC/April 29/2021

Titles For The Latest 
English LCCC Miscellaneous Reports And News published on April 29-30/2021

Our warplanes can reach Iran, Israeli minister warns amid nuclear talks
New French bill to boost online surveillance of extremists
Zarif tests the waters in Oman for dialogue with Saudis
Blinken warns off Turkey from buying more Russian missiles
Lenderking embarks on new US push for de-escalation in Yemen
Riyadh to close eight Turkish schools, likely ruffle Ankara
NATO Says Afghanistan Withdrawal Has Begun
Palestinian Leaders Weigh Delay of Long-Awaited Vote
India Covid Deaths Climb Again as Global Aid Flown In
Israel is not prepared for the Palestinian elections - editorial
 

Titles For The Latest The Latest LCCC English analysis & editorials from miscellaneous sources published on April 29-30/2021

Biden's first 100 days a rousing success by Trump's own measures - opinion/Douglas Bloomflield/Jerusalem Post/April 29/2021
The ramifications of a US return to the 2015 Iran deal - opinion/Efraim Inbar and Eran Lirman/Jerusalem Post /April 29/2021
F-35: The UAE’s Lightning or a Lemon?/Andrew E. Harrod/International Policy Digest/April 29/2021
Biden Acknowledges the Armenian Genocide; What of Other, Current Genocides?/Raymond Ibrahim/Gatestone Institute/April 29/2021
To know what happens when presidents hinder state affairs, ask Lebanon and Tunisia/Mohammad Krishan/MEM/April 29/2021
Biden's Border/Chris Farrell/Gatestone Institute/April 29/2021
Turkey: How Erdogan's Pledge for Reform Collapsed in Five Months/Burak Bekdil/Gatestone Institute/April 29/2021
Those who yearn for war in Libya/Habib Lassoued/The Arab Weekly/April 29/2021
Iran, the Competing Power Centers and Middle Eastern Imbroglios/Charles Elias Chartouni/April 30/2021

 

The Latest English LCCC Lebanese & Lebanese Related News & Editorials published on April 29-30/2021

Vaccination an Uphill Battle in Lebanon, Abiad Says
Naharnet/April 29, 2021
Director of the Rafik Hariri University Hospital Firass Abiad said on Thursday the vaccination campaign against coronavirus in Lebanon is an "uphill battle," pointing to a lack of availability of the vaccine. “The number of Covid cases admitted to RHUH continues its decline. Though ICU beds remain full, yesterday we closed one of our regular Covid wards. Other hospitals show a similar trend. Yet, as Covid cases elsewhere sharply increase, the future remains uncertain,” said Abiad in a tweet. He added that only 3% have been fully vaccinated in Lebanon, and 6% have been partially vaccinated. “This low number is caused by a lack of availability of the vaccine. Yet, less than 1/4 of the target population have registered for vaccination. Clearly, vaccine roll out will be an uphill battle,” said Abiad. However, evidence is mounting that vaccines can prevent severe illness in the vast majority of those infected, according to Abiad. He noted that the”majority of the population remains susceptible to the infection, and will unlikely acquire immunity soon. Yet the low Covid numbers will encourage people to return to their normal lives, and activity will likely increase as we head into the summer.”
Abiad said Lebanon’s failing economy is negatively impacting all institutions, and not just hospitals. “The received support is barely enough to sustain ongoing hospital activities. Currently, and as previously stated, the future financial situation of hospitals remains bleak,” he noted.

Aoun Reminds BDL of Deadline to Submit Financial Audit Files
Naharnet/April 29, 2021
President Michel Aoun on Thursday reminded the Lebanese that only a few days separate them from “the juncture of the handing over of files and documents by Banque du Liban to the financial audit firm.”“There is a deadline for submitting BDL’s files and documents to the financial audit firm and we and the Lebanese people are monitoring,” Aoun added in a tweet. On April 9, Lebanon provided the auditing firm with "updated" information for a stalled forensic audit of the central bank demanded by the international community, the finance ministry said. The International Monetary Fund and France are among creditors demanding an audit of Banque du Liban as part of urgent reforms to unlock financial support, as the country faces its worst economic crisis since the 1975-1990 civil war. The finance ministry said the central bank had sent it "the updated list of information requested by the forensic auditing firm Alvarez and Marsal and the ministry has sent it on to the firm." But BDL apparently did not hand over all the files and an agreement was reached on a new deadline. New York-based Alvarez and Marsal in November pulled out from the audit after the central bank claimed that provisions including Lebanon's banking secrecy law prevented it from releasing some of the necessary information. Lebanon's parliament in December approved a bill that suspends banking secrecy laws for one year to allow for the forensic audit.

 

President Aoun stresses support for work of National Commission for Missing and Forcibly Disappeared
NNA/April 29, 2021 
President of the Republic, General Michel Aoun, asserted that “The National Authority for the Missing and Forcibly Disappeared, which was established according to Law No. 105 (30/11/2018), is tasked to follow-up this humanitarian issue with distinction, in the hope of reaching practical results which reveal the fate of these missing and forcibly disappeared persons”. “This ends their sufferings and reassures their families, turning a painful page from the chapters of the events which Lebanon witnessed over the years” the President said. In addition, President Aoun stressed his full support for the Commission’s work, emphasizing his keenness that concerned state institutions exert all possible efforts in order to reach desired ends. Positions of the President came while meeting members of the National Commission for the Missing and Forcibly Disappeared, Judge Salim Al-Osta, and Forensic Doctor, Hassan Fayyad Hussein, today at the Presidential Palace. Judges Al-Osta and Hussein made the following oath before President Aoun: “I swear by God Almighty to carry-out my duties, at the National Commission for the Missing and Victims of Enforced Disappearance, with honesty, sincerity, independence and impartiality, and to conduct all my actions in a manner which inspires confidence and concern for the supremacy of right, and the protection and promotion of human rights”. -- Presidency Press Office
 

France to bar entry to some Lebanese officials hindering progress
Reuters/April 29, 2021
With the EU, Paris has been working on creating a sanctions regime for Lebanon
As part of efforts to raise pressure on key Lebanese actors, France intends to stop issuing visas to certain officials, diplomats have said.

PARIS: France said on Thursday it had started putting in measures to limit some Lebanese officials from entering the country on the grounds that they were blocking efforts to find a solution to the political and economic crisis. France has spearheaded international efforts to rescue Lebanon from its deepest crisis since the 1975-1990 civil war, but after eight months has failed so far to persuade squabbling politicians to adopt a reform roadmap or form a new government to unlock international aid. With the European Union, Paris has been working on creating a sanctions regime for Lebanon that could ultimately see asset freezes and travel bans. However, that is likely to take time. As part of efforts to raise pressure on key Lebanese actors, France intends to stop issuing visas to certain officials, diplomats have said. "On a national basis, we have started to implement restrictive measures in terms of access to French territory against personalities involved in the current political blockage, or involved in corruption," Foreign Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian said in remarks alongside his Maltese counterpart. Le Drian gave no names and it was not clear if the actual measures were already in place. "It’s not just words in the air," said a French diplomat. They (Lebanese officials) can reassure themselves that it’s not just threats."Two diplomats said a list of names had been put together and people were being made aware. The French foreign ministry did not respond to requests for comment. As many senior Lebanese politicians have homes, bank accounts and investments in the EU and France, and send their children to universities there, a withdrawal of that access could be a lever to focus minds. "We reserve the right to adopt additional measures against all those who hinder the way out of the crisis and we will do so in coordination with our international partners," Le Drian added.

 

Bassil Urges Lavrov to Press Hariri on Government
Naharnet/April 29/2021
Free Patriotic Movement chief MP Jebran Bassil held talks Thursday in Moscow with Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov. “The (new) government is necessary but it will be insufficient should it lack the decision, will and ability to carry out reforms,” Bassil said at a press conference after the meeting. “This is a Lebanese affair; Russia does not interfere in domestic affairs but it is pushing for reforms and this is what we thank it for. We are all waiting for the PM-designate to take a decision to carry on with the government’s formation, and more importantly a decision to carry out reform,” the FPM chief added. “We asked the Russian foreign minister to play the necessary role to push the PM-designate to finalize the formation file and we also asked him to organize a conference in Lebanon to encourage the return of refugees,” Bassil went on to say. “Lebanon needs a government and there is negligence in achieving this matter. There is no other choice but to have a government that can move to achieve what’s necessary,” he added. Separately, Bassil said he called on Russian officials to encourage investment in Lebanon and to play a role in resolving the maritime border dispute between Lebanon and Syria. Bassil also noted that the upcoming Syrian presidential election will be a facilitating and encouraging factor regarding the refugee return, thanking Russia for its decision to offer Lebanon free Covid vaccines in response to a letter sent by President Michel Aoun in addition to the commercial vaccines that have started arriving in Lebanon.

Fahmi Expresses Gratitude to Saudi Arabia over Stuck Trucks
Naharnet/April 29/2021
Caretaker Interior Minister Mohammed Fahmi expressed gratitude to Saudi Arabia for allowing around 40 stranded Lebanese trucks on the Saudi border to enter the Kingdom, Fahmi’s press office said in a statement on Thursday.
“Caretaker Interior Minister Mohamed Fahmi extends his thankfulness to King Salman bin Abdulaziz, and Crown Prince Mohamed bin Salman, and Interior Minister Prince Abdulaziz bin Saud for their kind humanitarian initiative allowing Lebanese products stranded on the border with Saudi Arabia and in Jeddah port to enter the Kingdom,” read the statement. In the first Saudi move after the Kingdom’s decision to ban Lebanese fresh produce from entering its territory or passing through, the Saudi authorities allowed Lebanese trucks loaded with goods and stuck on the border to enter its territory. Saudi authorities reversed their decision after contacts from religious authorities in Lebanon, including Maronite Patriarch Beshara el-Rahi, Grand Mufti of the Republic, and Fahmi who was authorized to address the newly emerging crisis between Lebanon and Saudi Arabia over drug smuggling. “Fahmi was not surprised by the Saudi positivity, and he is certain that the Kingdom of Good will spare no effort to reconsider its latest position, mainly at this delicate stage that Lebanon and its people are going through,” the statement added. The Saudi decision banning fresh produce came over a drug-stuffed pomegranate shipment.

Saudi ban on Lebanese produce adds pressure on country’s economic crisis

Media Line/April 29/2021
A ban over claims that fruit and vegetables are used to smuggle drugs comes as the country experiences its worst economic and political crises ever. Saudi Arabia has declared that it will not allow Lebanese fruit and vegetable imports to enter the country, claiming that they are increasingly being used to smuggle drugs. The ban came into effect on Sunday, and will remain in place until Lebanon can guarantee that it has done what is needed to prevent drug-trafficking. Also on Sunday, Saudi Arabia frustrated an attempt to smuggle millions of captagon pills – an amphetamine drug – in a shipment of pomegranates arriving from Lebanon. The shipment reportedly originated in Syria, and was later shipped from Lebanon.  Saudi ambassador to Lebanon, Waleed A. Bukhari, tweeted that the quantities of drugs discovered with the pomegranates were “enough to drown the entire Arab world in drugs and psychotropic substances, not just Saudi Arabia.” On Monday, the Lebanese government asked the Saudis to reconsider the ban.  The kingdom’s ban has hit Lebanon as it is drowning in one of the worst crises in its history. The country, which endured and survived 15 years of civil war between 1975-1990 to devastating effect, now is being crushed under the twin weight of political dysfunctionality and a catastrophic economic situation. And COVID-19 isn’t helping.

Report: Halted Sea Border Talks Likely to Move ahead
Naharnet/April 29/2021
Lebanon’s halted sea border demarcation talks with Israel are likely to resume sometime “soon,” the reputable An Nahar newspaper reported on Thursday. According to “signals” received by “supervisors” of this file, some “positive” developments occurred recently, including “secret” talks away from the media spotlight. “Hopefully” the talks lead to a near resumption of indirect negotiations at the UNIFIL headquarters in Naqoura, said the daily. Shall the much-anticipated talks resume, it will be an indicator that the US mediator succeeded at obtaining Lebanon and Israel’s approval to resume the crucial talks, and counter concerns about tension building up between the two foes. Lebanon and Israel began indirect talks with U.S. mediation in October to reach a deal over the disputed area that is believed to be rich with oil and natural gas deposits. The meetings that stopped few weeks later were being held at a U.N. post along the border of the two nations that remain technically in a state of war. The negotiations were the first non-security talks to be held between the two countries, which have no diplomatic relations following decades of conflict. Resolving the border issue could pave the way for lucrative oil and gas deals on both sides. In late October, the Lebanese delegation to the talks — a mix of army generals and professionals — offered a new map that pushes for an additional 1,430 square kilometers (550 square miles). This area is to be included in Lebanese territory on top of the already disputed 860 square kilometer- (330 square mile-) area of the Mediterranean Sea that each side claims is within their own exclusive economic zones. The decree still required the signatures of the defense minister, prime minister and president to go into effect.
 

Israel, Lebanon aim to restart maritime border talks

Jerusalem Post/April 29/2021
"We are examining the renewal of talks based on the known disputed territory," Energy Minister Yuval Steinitz's spokesman said. Israel and Lebanon are considering relaunching negotiations on their maritime border, the Energy Ministry confirmed on Thursday.
"We are examining the renewal of talks based on the known disputed territory," Energy Minister Yuval Steinitz's spokesman said. Pro-Hezbollah Lebanese newspaper Al Akhbar said talks will take place on Monday, but the Israeli side said the date has yet to be finalized.
Israel and Lebanon entered negotiations for the first time in 30 years last year, with US mediation. If the talks restart, it will be the first time the Biden administration will be involved. The “known disputed territory” refers to a triangular area of the Mediterranean Sea that starts at the countries’ land border and is 5-6 km. wide on average. The area would be about 2% of Israel’s economic borders. During the previous four rounds of talks, in November and October 2020, Lebanon upped its demand with a line extending much further south, increasing the disputed area from about 860 sq.km. to 2,300 sq.km.
Two weeks ago, Lebanese Public Works and Transport Minister Michel Najjar announced that the greater demands would be submitted to the UN, but Lebanese President Michel Aoun did not move forward with the process. Aoun is expected to meet with the military delegation conducting the talks in the coming days to discuss the Lebanese position, Al Akhbar reported. Israel drew up its own map in response to increased demands from Lebanon, claiming more than double the area of the Mediterranean Sea that is currently in dispute. The map was first published by The Jerusalem Post on Monday.
The Energy Ministry only plans to use the map if Lebanon moves forward with submitting its new position to the UN. Israel and Lebanon hope that settling the border will encourage further gas exploration in the area. Israel already pumps significant amounts of gas from the Mediterranean, but Lebanon has yet to do so. Last week, following a meeting with Aoun, US Undersecretary of State for Political Affairs David Hale said negotiations between Israel and Lebanon “have potential to unlock significant economic benefits for Lebanon.”“This is all the more critical against the backdrop of the severe economic crisis the country is facing,” he said. The Energy Ministry source expressed hope that the talks will restart under the Biden administration and be productive.*Reuters contributed to this report.

 

Report: Diab Disapproves Lifting Subsidies before Food Ration Cards
Naharnet/April 29/2021
Caretaker Prime Minister Hassan Diab refuses lifting subsidies on basic goods in Lebanon before the crisis-stricken country completes the allocation of food ration cards mainly for needy families, media reports said on Thursday. A draft on financing food ration cards is not complete yet, pending the final approval of Diab, said VDL radio station. This card is being offered as an alternative to the subsidy on vital commodities (medicine, food, and fuel). But the mechanism of payment has not been decided yet. The card will be obtained through local banks. However, Diab actually set a condition for running this card. He refuses to have the Central Bank stop subsidies on basic goods before the card reaches at least 600,000 families. On the other hand, experts believe that Lebanon can save 1.4 billion dollars under a partial subsidy removal out of more than $ 5 billion the Central Bank of Lebanon pays in subsidies. The value of the card, from which 750 thousand families are supposed to benefit, amounts to one million and 330 thousand Lebanese pounds per month, provided that the family whose members exceed 4 people get one million and 700 thousand pounds per month. The economic crisis in Lebanon has depleted foreign reserves, prompting stark warnings the Central Bank can no longer finance subsidies of some basic commodities, including fuel.

 

U.S. Embassy Trains Lebanese Judges and Prosecutors through ABA
Naharnet/April 29/2021
In April 2021, the Office of International Narcotics and Law Enforcement Affairs (INL) at the Embassy of the United States in Beirut, in collaboration with the American Bar Association (ABA), concluded a series of training seminars for members of the Lebanese judicial system focused on efforts to strengthen the country’s criminal justice processes and develop proposals for alternative sentencing or judicial punishments other than incarceration, the US embassy said in a press release on Thursday. The Embassy’s support for this program represents its ongoing commitment to the creation of an independent and effective Lebanese judicial system that can address issues of corruption and help enact reforms necessary for the country’s development. Through a $1 million grant over two-and-a-half years, the ABA invited numerous American legal experts to provide technical training for more than 350 Lebanese judges and prosecutors. These sessions explored a range of topics, such as explanations of modern forensic techniques, the use of digital evidence in prosecutions, how to track money laundering schemes, the evolution of cyber-related crimes, how to prosecute case involving banking secrecy and illicit enrichment, and combatting public corruption. Other training sessions focused on the concept of plea bargaining and alternatives to incarceration as a means of reducing Lebanon’s pre-trial prison population. Together, these programs provided participants examples of best practices in international legal cooperation and expanded the knowledge and capacity for Lebanese officials to investigate such crimes. “This training served as an occasion for Lebanese judges to advance their knowledge and expertise on several subjects pertaining the various field of the law,” said Head of the Higher Judicial Council Judge Souheil Abboud. “These sessions allowed the Lebanese judiciary and INL to engage in a valuable collaboration which opens promising prospects for the future.”Following these seminars, the ABA conducted train-the-trainer sessions for fifteen Lebanese judges, who will develop continuing education classes for judges and prosecutors on similar topics, ensuring participants will retain their knowledge and implement the skills gained during the ABA sessions.
 

Polluted Lake Qaraoun Spews Out Tons of Dead Fish
Agence France Presse/April 29/2021
Tonnes of dead fish have washed up on the shore of a highly polluted lake in eastern Lebanon in the past few days, an official said Thursday. It was not immediately clear what caused the fish kill in Lake Qaraoun on the Litani river, which several local fisherman said was unprecedented in scale.
A preliminary report said a virus had killed only carp in the lake, but a veteran water expert said their deaths could also have been caused by pollution. Hundreds of fish of all sizes lay dead on the banks of the more than five kilometre (three mile) long lake Thursday, and the stench of their rotting flesh clung to the air. Men shovelled carcasses into a wheelbarrow, as a mechanical digger scooped up more into the back of a truck. "It's our third day here picking up dead fish," said Nassrallah el-Hajj, from the Litani River Authority, dressed in fishing waders, adding they had so far "carried away around 40 tonnes". On the water's edge, 61-year-old fisherman Mahmoud Afif said it was a "disaster"."In my life I've never seen anything like it," said the father-of-two. The Qaraoun lake was built as a reservoir on the Litani river in 1959 to produce hydropower and provide water for irrigation. But in recent years experts have warned huge quantities of wastewater, industrial waste, and agricultural runoff containing pesticides and fertiliser flooding into it have made it increasingly toxic.
'Toxic bloom'? -
Since 2018 fishing has been forbidden in the reservoir as the fish there was declared unfit for human consumption, though fish from the lake have continued to appear in several markets. The Litani River Authority and the Society for the Protection of Nature in Lebanon on Friday warned of a "viral epidemic", and called for fishing to be forbidden in the Litani as well as in the lake. It said the likely disease had only affected carp, while four other types of fish appeared to be unaffected. Kamal Slim, a water expert who has been taking samples of water from the lake for the past 15 years, said pollution could also be the cause. "Without analysis, we cannot be decisive," said the researcher. But the lake is also home to cyanobacteria, or blue-green algae, and in warmer months the excess nutrients from pollution have caused the bacteria to erupt into bright green blooms that release toxins. "Right now there is a cyanobacteria bloom, though less thick than last year," he said. That or a bacteria could be responsible for harming the fish, especially since they are weaker during the reproduction season. "Another possibility is very toxic ammonium," he said. In July 2016, Lebanese media reported that tonnes of fish floated to the surface overnight in the Qaraoun lake. Slim said that was due to a toxic bloom and oxygen depletion.

 

FPM Youth calls EU to help investigate money transfers from Lebanon
NNA/April 29/2021
The Youth Department of the Free Patriotic Movement mobilized outside the European Union offices' in Beirut Thursday, to up calls for helping Lebanon uncover the truth behind the money transferred from Lebanon after October 17, 2019. Elie Abi Raad and Rami Sadaqa from FPM Youth Department presented the EU offices with a letter hereby asking support for the anti-corruption campaign in Lebanon.
The letter read the following: "Dear esteemed member of the European Union, Opposed to what many try to portray, Lebanon is not a bankrupt or failed state, but rather a looted state. ةMid-2019, the Lebanese people were surprised to find that they were scammed and all their savings vanished from their bank accounts. Parents were not allowed to transfer money for students abroad for basic expenses such as rent and food. On the other hand, elitists were allowed to transfer millions. Since October 2019, Lebanese Banks have been transferring money discretionarily to those with power.
Our youth found their future being robbed and with no hope but to leave the country. We here today ask for your help. Based upon the evidence of embezzlement by elitists, as well as the UN Convention against corruption, resolution 58/4, which is signed by the Lebanese state and all members of the Europeans Unions, we request that you investigate the source of every transaction done by Lebanese politicians, workers of the public sectors and state contractors for alleged fraud. And in case fraud is confirmed, we please ask you to help us return that money to the deserving Lebanese people.
 

German Ambassador to Lebanon visits historical buildings saved by Germany and UNESCO under Li Beirut initiative
NNA/April 29/2021
On April 29th, 2021, His Excellency Mr. Andreas Kindl, German Ambassador to Lebanon, visited four damaged historic buildings that were recently stabilized and sheltered by UNESCO in Beirut, along with Judge Marwan Abboud, Governor of Beirut, Dr.Sarkis Khoury, Director General of Antiquities – Lebanese Ministry of Culture, and Ms. Costanza Farina, Director of the UNESCO office in Beirut. UNESCO architects and staff explained the technical work that has been undertaken in the project, which was financed by the German Federal Foreign Office with a contribution of 500,000 €, and was executed by UNESCO as part of its flagship initiative LiBeirut. The project includes, in total, 12 buildings with historical and heritage value, in the urban districts of Rmeil, Medawar and Saifi. Between December 2020 and March 2021, 11 of them have been stabilized, sheltered and propped in an urgent intervention by UNESCO and in close coordination with the Directorate General of Antiquities (DGA) of Lebanon. The buildings were severely damaged and at a high risk of collapse, following the devastating explosions on August 4. As most of them are privately owned, there was also a significant risk of gentrification, i.e. having these buildings demolished and replaced with a new architecture that would have changed the historical and cultural identity of the capital. “The Beirut blast has done tremendous damage to the heart of the city, said Ambassador Kindl. I am glad to see the results achieved by UNESCO in stabilizing and sheltering damaged historic buildings, and Germany has contributed 500.000 € to this effort”. “This is not only an element of the Foreign Office’s active policy to support the preservation of cultural and architectural heritage all over the world; it is also an element of our policy to strengthen multilateralism”, he added, pointing out the fact that Germany is the third largest contributor to UNESCO. Mr. Kindl also highlighted the fact that Germany is currently participating in the Lebanon Financing Facility(LFF), and that it will support the efforts of preserving cultural heritage as part of it. The LFF is set up to provide a pooled financing mechanism for the Lebanon Reform, Recovery and Reconstruction Framework (the 3RF), jointly launched by the EU, the World Bankand the UN.
As for Judge Marwan Abboud, Governor of Beirut, he noticed the difference between the situation of these buildings during the first days that followed the explosions, and their situation today, emphasizing “the greatness of the work that was done with the support of international organizations, associations, the international community and the municipality of Beirut, which contributed to the safeguarding of the cultural heritage by facilitating the interventions and giving the necessary permits”. He added: “Since day 1, we were next to the people of Beirut in this disaster-stricken area, and all efforts combined have made possible today the revival of these neighborhoods and streets, so that they return better than they werebefore the blasts. When these buildings were damaged by the explosions of the port, real estate developers rushed here in an attempt to exploit the situation, demolish heritage buildings and establish modern constructions, but the supreme national interest ruled to preserve the archaeological character of the area and its social fabric, mainly by taking appropriate legal measures. No historical or heritage building has been demolished, and we will not allow that in Beirut and in this particular area”.
Thanking Germany, UNESCO and all “the partners who have been with us since the port explosions”, Dr. Sarkis Khoury underlined from his side the fact that “the first phase of the interventions is now being completed with the stabilization, propping and sheltering of the damaged heritage buildings, but much remains to be done”. “The DGA and the Ministry of Culture have launched a campaign for the renovation works that should follow next and for which funds have not been secured yet”, he concluded. On her part, Ms. Costanza Farina asserted that “the visit to the stabilized buildings reveal the concrete achievements of the LiBeirutinitiative, which was launched by the UNESCO Director General Audrey Azoulay during her visit to Beirut in late August 2020, to mobilize partnerships and resources in support of the reconstructionof the city”. “With the generous funding from Germany, the first UNESCO Member State to respond to the call and to invest in cultural heritage interventions within the LiBeirut initiative, UNESCO has been able to save 12 historical buildings that otherwise would have collapsed. These emergency interventions have also created much needed jobs for architects, contractors, workers and are all part of a larger UNESCO program that supports the revitalization of heritage, cultural and artistic life in Beirut. These results are a proof that in close collaboration with the Directorate General of Antiquities and the support of the Governor of Beirut, UNESCO has created value and delivered on its promises”. “This is not the end but just the beginning of a joint path, where these and other historical buildings will be fully renovated. Culture, heritage and art are at the heart of Beirut’s identity and we are collectively working to see Beirut shine again”, she said. -- UNESCO

 

The Beirut port explosion: a geoscience study by Dr. Tony Nemer
NNA/April 29/2021
The National News Agency shares a geoscience study of the Beirut port explosion that was published in Seismological Research Letters on 28-4-2021 by Dr. Tony Nemer, who is professor of Geology at the American University of Beirut.
Generated waves
The study shows that the Beirut port explosion was so powerful that it generated seismic waves equivalent of an earthquake ranging in magnitude from 3.3 to 3.6 as recorded by different seismological networks. The explosion also caused the propagation of an enormous blast wave, a hydro-acoustic wave, and an infrasonic wave (sub-audible to human hearing). The blast wave was by far the leading cause of mass destruction that followed the blast. The hydro-acoustic signals were detected by sea-bottom seismometers as they propagated from the explosion epicenter through the Mediterranean water. The infrasonic signals propagated in the atmosphere over long distances and were recorded by infrasound receptors of the International Monitoring System of the Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty at distances up to 9,000 km.
Most of the losses and destruction that followed the Beirut explosion were basically due to the blast wave that propagated radially through the air and inflicted direct destruction to lives and properties within a radius of about 4 km. This account ties perfectly well with all the footage that documented the moment of the explosion followed by the shaking of buildings and then by the damage to properties as the blast wave spread out above the ground.
Yield estimation
The reported culprit of 2750 tons of ammonium nitrates is equivalent to about 880 tons of TNT based on a relative effectiveness factor of 0.32 (which means that every one weight unit of ammonium nitrates corresponds to 0.32 weight unit of TNT). It should be noted, however, that the determination of the explosive relative effectiveness using TNT equivalency is a bit complicated as it depends on several factors that are related to the ammonium nitrate such as density, porosity, nitrogen content, contamination, storage, and initiating events.
The study mentions that most yield estimates based on different studies are included within the range 500-1120 tons of TNT equivalent, which makes of the Beirut explosion one of the biggest documented ammonium nitrate explosions in history.
Intensity distribution of destruction
A preliminary intensity distribution map provided by the United States Geological Survey shows damage intensity ranging between V and VII, which would correspond to an earthquake magnitude ranging between 5 and 6. NASA's Advanced Rapid Imaging and Analysis team used synthetic aperture radar (SAR) data collected before and after the explosion to map the extent of damage caused by the blast in terms of changes in the land surface and built structures. The data suggest that the distribution of damage indicates a direct relation with distance. These observations are similar to an earthquake’s affected region where the intensity distribution of damage would normally be strongest close to the epicenter and decreases with distance.
Closing remarks
The Beirut explosion was one of the biggest documented ammonium nitrate blasts in history. The explosion’s aftermath was no less than that of a natural disaster that can have a similar toll in Lebanon, known for historic earthquakes and tsunamis. The official disaster response and management proved to be almost non-existent. Although the outcome was devastating, it was relatively localized, unlike earthquakes which may cause widespread damage. Accordingly, the Lebanese authorities need to put forward suitable disaster response plans in preparation for potential natural disasters in the future. Lastly, despite the non-existent causal relation between the Beirut port explosion and any potential earthquake that could occur in the future, the explosion’s catastrophic outcome should alarm the Lebanese authorities enough to cause them to reconsider the impact of many proposed projects that they have been warned could pose a direct risk on public safety, such as some of the dam projects that are underway despite their high risk of potentially causing earthquakes due to reservoir induced seismicity. Remark: please refer to the original article where all figures and tables and references are included.
 

World should not overlook Hezbollah’s illegal activities
Khaled Abou Zahr/Arab News/April 29/2021
خالد أبو زهر: على العالم أن لا يغض الطرف عن انشطة حزب الله المخالفة للقوانين
http://eliasbejjaninews.com/archives/98371/%d8%ae%d8%a7%d9%84%d8%af-%d8%a3%d8%a8%d9%88-%d8%b2%d9%87%d8%b1-%d8%b9%d9%84%d9%89-%d8%a7%d9%84%d8%b9%d8%a7%d9%84%d9%85-%d8%a3%d9%86-%d9%84%d8%a7-%d9%8a%d8%ba%d8%b6-%d8%a7%d9%84%d8%b7%d8%b1%d9%81/

The pomegranate shipment from Lebanon that was used to smuggle Captagon drugs and was seized by the Saudi authorities last week should not come as a surprise to anyone. Indeed, it has been well known for some time now that Hezbollah protects and engages in a myriad illegal activities.
This once again highlights the fact that this organization has no respect for the law, governments, citizens’ interests and well-being or anything that does not support its own interests. And in that case, all that matters is that it gets its share of the drug smuggling money. This was, of course, not an isolated incident. In June last year, the European law enforcement agency warned that Hezbollah operatives were believed to be “trafficking in diamonds and drugs.” Also last year, two major seizures of Captagon pills were achieved by police in Italy and Greece, with a combined value exceeding $1 billion.
Hezbollah, with the support of Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), has for decades been relying on illegal activities to finance part of its activities. When one knows the control Hezbollah has over every single port and airport in Lebanon, as well as its control of all smuggling routes and its international network from Africa to the Americas that has been targeted by the US Justice Department, there is no doubt about the role it plays in international drug trafficking.
As Saudi Arabia takes the necessary action and bans agricultural products from Lebanon, I wonder how the Lebanese authorities might guarantee strong measures against drug organizations and launch a strong crackdown on their protectors. This is simply impossible. Lebanon is now the land of lawlessness. It has no credibility, as everything is permitted. Once again, one should remember that the Saudi decision came after repeated similar smuggling attempts from Lebanon, and patience and support have their limits.
This time it was drugs, but knowing that Hezbollah and the IRGC are ultimately behind these activities means that these routes and channels could also be used to try and smuggle other illegal materials, such as explosives and weapons. In short, Lebanon is no longer eroding but simply destroying its international relations for the sake and interests of Hezbollah and Iran. This not only applies to the Gulf, but also to countries from Asia to Europe.I am nevertheless expecting several Western analysts to shift the topic of Hezbollah’s nefarious role in Lebanon and take the usual spin of “Arab countries are abandoning Lebanon,” as if everyone should yield to the blackmail imposed by Hezbollah with a smile on their face. We insult you but we need you to welcome our expatriates; we send you smuggled drugs in fruits, but you need to keep importing our products; we threaten your security, but you still need to lobby for us internationally; we disappear your deposits in our banks, but you still need to send us subsidies and support our corrupt, rotten economy. Am I missing something else?
Lebanon is simply destroying its international relations for the sake and interests of Hezbollah and Iran.
This time, they might start adding a third wing to their usual Hezbollah description that separates the political organization from the armed one — an illegal wing. They might as well start justifying such activities as they provide Hezbollah with resources due to the dire economic situation and the inability of the IRGC to support it due to US sanctions. They have absolved Hezbollah and Iran from so much more, so this would not be a surprise, especially as the nuclear deal is back on track.
It has also become shameful and humiliating that Lebanese political leaders are asking other countries to not take measures against it while all this is taking place and Lebanon bears responsibility. This is “Stockholm syndrome” politics at its highest level. If Lebanon cannot clean its own house, we should not expect change from others. There is no longer a place for the politicians’ justification of a “bitter pill” for the greater good. The greater good of Lebanon comes with the end of Hezbollah’s status. It is time all politicians stopped marketing this greater good phrase while protecting Hezbollah, as this is what is dragging the country into more chaos. Change will only come with an end to Hezbollah’s military arsenal and its status of being above and controlling the state; Vichy-like trials would also be needed.
Another important point to investigate is that there is no drug trade without money laundering. For every flow of goods, there is a flow of money going in the opposite direction. At the very least, investigations should focus on this. Which banks or local financial institutions might have facilitated this? Could the Banque du Liban have played a historical role in covering such operations for Hezbollah until the US sanctions were imposed? It is high time for a thorough, forensic investigation into trading and financial institutions — private and public — in Lebanon.
We are at a decisive time. As the world re-engages with Iran through the nuclear deal, it should not ease up on Hezbollah’s illegal activities and the IRGC. The US should continue sanctioning Hezbollah and its allies in Lebanon and everywhere else. The US Justice Department, which in 2018 designated Hezbollah as a transnational crime organization, should keep focusing on and disrupting these activities. It is also a much-needed message to Iran that Hezbollah’s activities will not be tolerated.
It is also important for the US and the European nations involved in the nuclear deal to properly categorize Hezbollah as what it really is. It is not a Lebanese political party, it is not a group resisting occupation, it is not a social organization for the Shiite community — it is a non-state terrorist organization with its master in Tehran.
The international community needs to understand that one cannot build a country with an organization that conducts such activities. This cannot be accepted; even pragmatism does not allow it. It is time to put pressure on Iran in Lebanon, or else this will be its first step toward blackmailing the Mediterranean region and Europe. Iran should integrate and play a role in the future of the region as the nuclear deal intends, but it needs to give up these activities and Hezbollah’s current structure. This is as essential as a nuclear deal.
• Khaled Abou Zahr is CEO of Eurabia, a media and tech company. He is also the editor of Al-Watan Al-Arabi.

Hezbollah exported drugs, weapons, with Lebanon government knowledge
Hudhaifa Ebrahim/Media Line/April 29/2021
هودهيفا ابراهام: حزب الله يصدر المخدرات والأسلحة من لبنان بمعرفة الحكومة اللبنانية

http://eliasbejjaninews.com/archives/98365/hudhaifa-ebrahim-hezbollah-exported-drugs-weapons-with-lebanon-government-knowledge-%d9%87%d9%88%d8%af%d9%87%d9%8a%d9%81%d8%a7-%d8%a7%d8%a8%d8%b1%d8%a7%d9%87%d8%a7%d9%85-%d8%ad%d8%b2%d8%a8-%d8%a7/

After massive drug and weapons seizures, Saudi Arabia bans the import of Lebanese produce, with support from Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, and the UAE.
Saudi Arabia on Sunday imposed a ban on the import or transit through the kingdom of all fruits and vegetables from Lebanon after a series of seizures, drugs and weapons in shipments coming from the Land of the Cedars to the Gulf countries.
On Friday, Saudi authorities intercepted over 2.4 million amphetamine pills, concealed in a shipment of pomegranates coming from Lebanon.
Walid al-Bukhari, the Saudi ambassador to Beirut, tweeted on Sunday that his country had seized more than 600 million narcotic pills and hundreds of kilograms of hashish smuggled from Lebanon over the last six years.
In addition, Greece announced on Thursday evening, following information received from the US Drug Enforcement Administration, that it had seized four tons of cannabis in Piraeus Port, which was hidden in a shipment of industrial cupcake-making machines bound from Lebanon to Slovakia.
The decision, which will also affect Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar and the United Arab Emirates, will lead to more than $70 million in estimated annual lost sales, NGOs concerned with agriculture in Lebanon told local media outlets.
Four Gulf countries issued statements of support for the Saudi decision by press time, namely Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman and the UAE, while Qatar had yet to issue a reaction.
Newspapers in Bahrain, Saudi Arabia and Kuwait reported that decisions will be issued soon related to permanently banning imports from Lebanon until a solution is found to the problem of drug and weapons smuggling.
The products coming from Lebanon constitute at most 10% of the Gulf Cooperation Council countries’ produce imports. said by authorities in Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Kuwait, Bahrain and Oman. Countries such as Egypt, Jordan, Pakistan and India will be able to fill the gap.
RO (whose full name has been withheld for fear of assassination), a former Hezbollah member who used to export arms and drugs to various countries, told The Media Line, “Hezbollah relies mainly on [the sale of] drugs since the lack of funding caused by US sanctions on a number of party members and against Iran, in addition to the collapse of the Lebanese state.
“We were working all day on Hezbollah farms in villages like Yammoune [in the Baalbek-Hermel Governorate] and other Lebanese villages in Shebaa Farms [known in Israel as Mount Dov], which are the main source of drugs in Lebanon and are under the protection of the party’s forces, in addition to sections of the Lebanese army,” RO said.
“The volume of drugs that the party used to ship from Lebanon alone up to 2016 was estimated at more than $5 billion annually, not including its cooperation with Iranian facilities at drug farms in certain Latin American countries. It is a network of drug cartels,” he continued.
“As for farms that export vegetables, they are not owned by Hezbollah, but whoever does not cooperate with it, will have their agricultural crops burned, or they would be threatened or killed, done with the knowledge of the Lebanese state, who cannot do anything about it,” RO said.
He explained: “More than 10,000 people, all of them Lebanese, work with salaries not exceeding $100 a month to pack drugs, and sometimes weapons, and any truck driver who does not cooperate with the party will obtain permits for his exit from Lebanon or regarding other security measures.
“Weapons are imported from Iran, Syria or Iraq, and they are also sent via shipments of vegetables, fruits and some other products exported by Lebanon, such as electrical appliances,” RO said.
“Arms constitute only a small part of these exports, given the difficulty of exporting them, and the countries to which arms are exported in the Gulf are Saudi Arabia, Kuwait and Bahrain,” he said.
“Hezbollah owns more than five camps to train fighters from the Ansar Allah Al-Houthi [Iran-backed Yemeni rebel] group as well as fighters from Bahraini and Kuwaiti groups belonging to the Shiite sect, who undergo training courses of between two weeks and six months in duration,” RO added.
“The weapons that are exported are machine guns and handguns, in addition to detonators, and [explosive] materials such as TNT and C-4. As for the rest of the materials from which bombs are made, they are available in the local market,” the former Hezbollah operative said.
“The Lebanese security services are aware of all these transactions, but they cannot talk about them what with the collapse of the Lebanese state, and what happened in the port of Beirut [the huge explosion last August] was a small example of what Hezbollah owns inside Lebanon. The army, Interior Ministry, customs service, ports and airport are all under the control of Hezbollah,” RO said.
Ibrahim Al Moussawi, a Shiite member of the Loyalty to the Resistance Bloc, the political wing of Hezbollah in the Lebanese parliament, told The Media Line that accusations against Hezbollah of smuggling and trading in drugs are untrue, saying, “What Saudi Arabia did is part of the campaign to starve the Lebanese people in the service of American, Western, and Israeli interests. We do not trade in drugs, and it is forbidden according to Sharia, and the secretary-general of the party, Hassan Nasrallah, has denied these accusations several times.”
He added, “This is nonsense and false accusations against the Lebanese resistance. Saudi Arabia must tighten its security, but not at the expense of the Lebanese people.”
Ibrahim Al-Tarshihi, head of the farmers and peasants’ association in Lebanon’s Bekaa region, told local Lebanese media outlets that “Lebanese agricultural production is innocent of the charge of exporting drugs to the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia.”
He added, “Lebanon does not have pomegranates to export. We have noticed for several years that there are goods from several countries that are exported as Lebanese goods. Perhaps Syria is the one who exported this shipment as Lebanese.”
Badr Abdulaziz, a Bahraini political and security expert, told The Media Line that Bahrain had several times “confiscated land shipments of Lebanese goods containing weapons or drugs.
“There are dozens of [Bahraini Shiite] fighters whom Bahrain previously announced that Hezbollah had trained in camps in Shebaa Farms or in the southern suburbs of Beirut, but the Lebanese state did not respond to Bahrain or even the Gulf states in this matter,” Abdulaziz said.
“The Saudi decision should have been taken a long time ago, and what Saudi Arabia announced about 200 million [sic] narcotic tablets is but a small part of what Hezbollah tried to smuggle,” he said.
“We all know that the Lebanese state is weak and that Hezbollah controls all the important institutions in it, but the Gulf states cannot allow Lebanon to be a source of drugs or weapons or a training ground for outlaws to destabilize security and stability in the Gulf states,” Abdulaziz said.
“Previously, five or six shipments were seized coming from Lebanon, and this shipment that Saudi Arabia has now seized is perhaps the largest. We in the Gulf countries have not been harmed [by the import ban]. We have other sources to compensate for the simple shortage of vegetables, fruits and other Lebanese products, so the only loser is the Lebanese people,” the Bahraini analyst said.
“An investigation in Bahrain proved that the Lebanese Hezbollah group was planning to try to smuggle weapons into Bahrain, which were seized on a bus coming from Iraq carrying Bahraini Shiite visitors, and although the shipment was coming from Iraq, Hezbollah was responsible for smuggling it,” Abdulaziz said.
Muhammad al-Qubban, a Saudi security expert, told The Media Line, “Over the past six years, Saudi Arabia has seized more than 600 million drug pills arriving in shipments from Lebanon.”
“The decision of the Saudi authorities is a message to Lebanon, that the state, and not political parties and militias in the country, is the responsible actor. Saudi Arabia has informed the Lebanese authorities several times about the smuggling of weapons and drugs from Beirut, but there was no response,” he said.
“Seventy-five percent of the shipments that Lebanon sends to the Gulf contain drugs or weapons and other prohibited items. It is the responsibility of the Lebanese authorities to inspect all containers before they leave Lebanon,” Qubban said.

Why Beirut Beckons

Michael Young/Carnegia MEC/April 29/2021
Might the Arab states hand Lebanon over to Syria as compensation for distancing itself from Iran?
Is there a way that major Gulf countries such as Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, as well as other Arab states, can restore some of their influence in Lebanon? The question may seem peculiar at a time when the Saudis seem to have given up on the country, regarding it as being solidly held by Iran and its local proxy Hezbollah.
If the Saudis and Emiratis seek to limit Iran’s sway in the region, then simply abandoning Lebanon doesn’t represent a strategy. Nor does it mean taking advantage of regional changes to try to contain Iran’s reach. The mechanisms of Hezbollah’s control are slowly eroding in Lebanon. The party had advanced its local agenda through the Lebanese state and a political class that saw any confrontation with Hezbollah as an invitation to civil conflict and, therefore, a threat to its own existence. Yet today the state is decomposing, the rifts in the country’s political leadership appear to be irreconcilable, and Hezbollah is already preparing to protect its own followers from the oncoming economic catastrophe, a good sign that it has doubts about reconstituting the façade of the state to its advantage.
If Lebanon cracks further, as it surely will, spaces will open up that Hezbollah no longer controls. Wherever Iran has interfered in the Arab world—Syria, Yemen, Iraq, and Lebanon—the results have been anarchy and disarray. The so-called “resistance axis” is nothing more than an axis of failure and bankruptcy. The temptation of the Saudis and the Emiratis may be to allow the whole rotten edifice to disintegrate. However, that offers no certainty that they can shape the aftermath, and is not how they have approached Syria, a country miles ahead of Lebanon in its descent into the netherworld.
Perhaps that’s because the two countries realize that Iran and its allies are better equipped to survive in chaos than are their enemies. Certainly, the Emirati approach in Yemen has been to fill emerging vacuums with alternative orders to better protect itself—whether by facilitating the creation of an autonomous entity in the south, or by building military bases near, or settling pro-Emirati forces in, the western coastal areas to guard access to the Bab al-Mandeb Strait. Saudi Arabia is following suit. Having seen that it cannot roll back the Houthis, it is now focused on overhauling its southern border.
In recent months, there has been a noticeable shift in the positions of Saudi Arabia and the UAE toward Syria. The Emiratis reopened an embassy in Damascus in 2018, and there have been multiple signs recently of an Arab desire to return Syria to the Arab League. The Saudis have taken a more cautious approach than the UAE, Iraq, or Egypt, but ultimately the kingdom will go along with a consensual decision to resume contacts with the regime of President Bashar al-Assad. However, this raises an important question: What price will the Arab states and Syria try to extract for such a resumption?
The Gulf states, feeling that Syria is exceptionally vulnerable—with reconstruction costs estimated in 2019 at anywhere between $200 billion and $400 billion—will most probably demand that Syria downgrade its relationship with Iran. Assad will not want to do so, but his options are limited. Few countries are willing to give money to Syria while Assad remains in power, so he cannot be choosy if he wants to initiate a reconstruction process. Nor will reducing Syria’s ties with Tehran be easy, so extensive is Iranian power in the country, reaching into the regime’s core security and intelligence institutions.
However, Assad does have options if he decides to recalibrate with Iran. He can count on the backing of Russia, which also has extended its influence over Syria’s military and security sectors. Moscow appears keener to stabilize Syria within an Arab consensus than Iran, and has been instrumental in trying to change Arab attitudes toward Damascus. The Syrian president also has an election this year. While its democratic worth will be nil, his manufactured victory will give the Syrian regime new momentum, as well as bogus legitimacy that he will try to build upon. That begs another question: What will Assad demand in return from the Arab states for going at least part of the way in meeting their conditions with respect to Iran?
Here the answer may be worrisome for the Lebanese. What Assad may well ask for is renewed influence in Lebanon. The structures of such influence will be different compared to the pre-2005 period when the Syrian army was deployed in the country. It’s difficult to imagine that Syria’s armed forces will return, even if the over 1 million Syrians currently in Lebanon can be a step in that direction. If Assad is guaranteed of naming a certain number of parliamentary deputies, and the various Arab states compel their local allies to include pro-Syrian politicians in their electoral lists, that may be another. At the same time, if Syria, backed by the Arab states, also has a say in whom becomes president, prime minister, and speaker of parliament, that could further whet Assad’s appetite.
The Syrians could seek to anchor this through heightened collaboration with the Lebanese army and intelligence services. While we may not see Syria soldiers in Lebanon’s streets, what would prevent Syrian intelligence officers from being present in the country alongside their Lebanese counterparts? The Lebanese-Syrian Treaty of Brotherhood, Cooperation, and Coordination of May 1991, like the Lebanese-Syrian Defense and Security Pact of September 1991, could legitimize such arrangements, with far-reaching consequences.
What would the Arab states gain from such a plan? First, they may well consider greater Syrian control over Lebanon as a means of reducing Iran’s footprint in both Syria and Lebanon. If that were to unlock Arab financial assistance for Beirut, the Arab states might assume, it could silence Lebanese resistance to any such scheme. Second, the Arab states could consider Syria’s restoration in Lebanon as a way of stabilizing a chronically dysfunctional country, much as Syria did after the end of the country’s civil war in 1990. And third, by boosting Syria’s Arab bona fides through a heightened role for Damascus, the new situation could facilitate an eventual settlement with Israel, preventing Iran’s return, and alleviate tensions in the Levant while opening the door to wider Arab-Israeli agreements.
Lebanon’s reprehensible abandonment would in no way constitute an obstacle. The country has become such a headache for the Arab world that parking it under the domination of a regional state poses no problems—as long as it’s an Arab state. This would help explain why Hezbollah has been so adamant in its refusal to put pressure on Gebran Bassil in the government-formation process. The party knows the two prime candidates for the presidency next year are the Hezbollah-aligned Bassil and Suleiman Franjieh, a close Assad ally. Weakening Bassil, Hezbollah may feel, would only strengthen Franjieh and the Syrians’ hand in Lebanon, ultimately at the party’s expense. So, while Hezbollah and Syria are allies regionally, they are competitors in Lebanon and the party has no intention of relinquishing what it gained after the Syrian withdrawal in 2005.
What worries Hezbollah and Iran is that the Arab states and Russia appear to be on the same wavelength in Syria and Lebanon. Reconstituting the semblance of an Arab order is desirable for them, as this would bring back some stability to Syria and to a region that has suffered from a decade of volatility and violence. The main driver leading to this situation, the Arabs and Russians might agree, is a revisionist Iran that has exploited and exacerbated sectarian and social divisions in Arab societies to advance its expansionist ambitions. In the process, Tehran has accelerated the region’s ruin.
This explains the emerging fault line between Syria’s and Iran’s allies in Lebanon. In this regard, one former parliamentarian described the tirade against Bassil last week by a prominent Syrian ally, Elie al-Firzli, as a sign of things to come. Likewise, the different paths adopted by the pro-Iranian Hezbollah and the pro-Syrian Amal Movement with regard to President Michel Aoun and Bassil reveal similar strains. Iran is feeling insecure about its stakes in the region. Hezbollah and the Iranians are facing incessant Israeli attacks in Syria, without any Russian support. Moscow is stitching together understandings over Syria with regional powers on opposite sides of the Syrian question—Saudi Arabia, the UAE, and Egypt, but also Qatar and Turkey. And the Astana process, which had brought Iran into a tripartite negotiating format with Russia and Turkey to address the Syrian situation, has fallen by the wayside.
The reason why all sides are unable to form a government in Lebanon is that beyond the personal animosity between Bassil and Saad al-Hariri there lies a deeper problem, namely that the nature of any government will have a bearing on the regional balance. Aoun and Bassil are the only partners Hezbollah has in its efforts to push back against Arab backing for a Syrian revival in Lebanon. Therefore, the party will not side with Hariri against the president and his son in law. This stalemate may last, and it appears that Hezbollah is now looking toward the nuclear deal with Iran to consolidate its role at home. Ironically, that is why it does not want Lebanon to fragment.
If this is indeed the thinking among the leading Arab states, then they should be realistic. The Assad regime will almost certainly aim to pocket any advantage it can secure in Lebanon, without surrendering much on Iran. The Syrians prefer to position themselves midway between the Arab states, Russia, and Iran to play all sides off against each other to their own benefit. In the coming months the situation in Lebanon will ripen more as Aoun’s presidency begins to wind down and everyone gets a better sense of where negotiations over the nuclear deal are heading. With elections scheduled in Syria, Iran, and Lebanon in the coming two years, the region is preparing for what could be a transformative period.
*Carnegie does not take institutional positions on public policy issues; the views represented herein are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of Carnegie, its staff, or its trustees.
 

The Latest English LCCC Miscellaneous Reports And News published on April 29-30/2021

Our warplanes can reach Iran, Israeli minister warns amid nuclear talks
Reuters/April 29, 2021
Intelligence Minister Eli Cohen said: “A bad deal will send the region spiralling into war”
“Israel will not allow Iran to attain nuclear arms. Iran has no immunity anywhere. Our planes can reach everywhere in the Middle East — and certainly Iran,” he said
JERUSALEM: An Israeli cabinet minister sharpened his country’s warnings against what it would deem a bad new nuclear deal between Iran and world powers, saying war with Tehran would be sure to follow.
As President Joe Biden explores a possible US return to the 2015 deal to contain Iran’s nuclear program that his predecessor Donald Trump abandoned, Israel has stepped up calls for more sweeping curbs to be imposed on sensitive Iranian technologies and projects. Iran, which this week resumed indirect talks with US envoys in Vienna on reversing its retaliatory violations of the deal in exchange for the removal of sanctions reimposed by Trump, has ruled out any further limitations on Iranian actions. Reiterating Israel’s position that it does not consider itself bound by the diplomacy, Intelligence Minister Eli Cohen said: “A bad deal will send the region spiralling into war.”“Anyone seeking short-term benefits should be mindful of the longer-term,” he told Reuters. “Israel will not allow Iran to attain nuclear arms. Iran has no immunity anywhere. Our planes can reach everywhere in the Middle East — and certainly Iran.”
Iran says its nuclear ambitions are peaceful.
Cohen said that in addition to denying Iran the means of enriching uranium and developing ballistic missiles, world powers should make it stop “destabilising other countries” and funding militants. The Vienna talks have been overshadowed by what appeared to be mutual sabotage attacks on Israeli and Iranian ships, as well as an explosion at Iran’s Natanz enrichment plant that Tehran blamed on Israel. Cohen, in keeping with Israeli policy, declined all comment. Israel sent senior delegates to Washington this week to discuss Iran with US counterparts. The White House said the allies agreed on the “significant threat” posed by Iran’s regional behavior. The Israeli ambassador to the United States, Gilad Erdan, said the Biden administration would consult with Israel about any new nuclear deal — the prospects for which he deemed hazy. “We assess, to our regret, that the Iranians will refuse such a discussion,” he told Israel’s public radio station Kan, alluding to Iran’s insistence on restoring the original deal, which Trump called too limited in scope and duration. “But if it emerges that we were mistaken, and the Americans succeed in securing a discussion of a different, better deal, we will certainly be part of that discussion. We made that clear and the (Biden) administration welcomes this, of course.”

 

New French bill to boost online surveillance of extremists
The Arab Weekly/April 29/2021
PARIS - France plans to strengthen its counter-terrorism laws by permitting the use of algorithims to detect activity on extremist websites. Draft legislation was submitted to President Emmanuel Macron and his government at a cabinet meeting on Wednesday, after a wave of Islamist and Islamist-inspired attacks on French soil in recent years, including last Friday. “The last nine attacks on French soil were committed by individuals who were unknown to the security services, who were not on a watchlist and were not suspected of being radicalised,” Interior Minister Gerald Darmanin told France Inter radio. “That should cause us to ask questions about the intelligence methods we’re using,” Darmanin added. France enacted a counter-terrorism law in 2017 to replace a state of emergency declared two years earlier following the attack on Paris by extremist suicide bombers and gunmen. The 2017 law, which was subject to review after four years, allowed security agencies to use algorithms to monitor messaging apps, as well bolstering police surveillance measures such as ‘home visits’ to individuals suspected of terrorism links and the restricting the movement of people. The new bill would render those measures permanent and extend the use of algorithims to websites. “Terrorists have changed the methods of communication. We continue to be blind, monitoring phone lines that nobody uses any more,” Darmanin said. In a news conference, Interior Minister Gerald Darmanin said the text will strengthen French intelligence services’ power to watch people’s online activities. Extremists “are using less and less phone lines and more and more internet connections,” he said. One measure will extend the use by French intelligence services of algorithms to track down extremists online, a method already being trialed since 2015 to monitor messaging apps. Darmanin said that using algorithms will notably enable intelligence services to spot someone who has accessed extremist websites several times. The Tunisian national who killed a police employee in a Paris commuter town five days ago had watched religious videos glorifying acts of terrorism just before carrying out his attack, the anti-terrorism prosecutor has said. The bill would give security agencies more power to watch over and limit the movements of high-risk individuals after release from jail for two years rather than one. Furthermore, it would give judges the authority to impose follow-up measures, including psychiatric care, on prisoners who served at least five years for terrorism-related offences in an effort to reduce repeat offences.

 

Zarif tests the waters in Oman for dialogue with Saudis
The Arab Weekly/April 29/2021
MUSCAT, Oman - Iranian Foreign Minister Muhammad Javad Zarif included the sultanate of Oman in his regional tour that has taken in Qatar and Iraq, amid reports that efforts are being made to bridge the divide between long-standing rivals Iran and Saudi Arabia and launch a dialogue between them.
The three capitals visited by Zarif, Doha, Baghdad and Muscat, share good relations with Tehran. Oman is well-experienced in brokering mediation between parties with vastly divergent views.Despite the lack of authoritative information from official sources, Middle East analysts have linked Zarif’s regional tour to efforts aimed at launching talks between Saudi Arabia and Iran. The Financial Times went so far as to say that such talks had already begun at a low level. It said a meeting took place earlier this month in Baghdad between officials from the two countries. Sources did not rule out that the visit made by Saudi Foreign Minister Prince Faisal bin Farhan on Monday to Doha was related to the diplomatic momentum behind the quest for Saudi-Iranian dialogue, especially since it came on the heels of a similar visit by Zarif to Qatar. On Wednesday, Zarif was received in Muscat by Omani Deputy Prime Minister for Cabinet Affairs Fahd bin Mahmoud Al Said, along with Minister of Foreign Affairs Badr al-Busaidi. The Omani News Agency (ONA) said the meeting brought about “a review of the existing bilateral relations between the two friendly countries and ways to bolster them in several fields”.
The meeting also discussed matters of “mutual interest” and the two parties “exchanged views on developments on the regional and international arenas and the efforts aimed at promoting security and stability in the region in order to serve the interests of its peoples and strengthen international cooperation ,” added ONA. Iranian Foreign Ministry Spokesman Saeed Khatibzadeh had described Zarif’s regional tour as being aimed at “developing bilateral relations and following up on regional talks and beyond.”Saudi Arabia and Iran have not confirmed that their representatives held talks in Baghdad, but hints have intensified about their willingness to start a dialogue. “Iran is a neighbouring country and all we aspire for is a good and special relationship with Iran,” said Prince Mohammed. “We do not want Iran’s situation to be difficult. On the contrary, we want Iran to grow… and to push the region and the world towards prosperity,” he added. In what was considered an indication of efforts being made to start a dialogue between Riyadh and Tehran, the crown prince said Tuesday, “We are working with our partners to deal with this problem and we hope to overcome it and have a good and positive relationship with everyone.”Riyadh severed diplomatic relations with Tehran in January 2016 following attacks on its embassy in the Iranian capital and its consulate in Mashhad by violent “demonstrators” protesting the kingdom’s execution of the Shia cleric Nimr al-Nimr. Iran has previously rejected Saudi calls to include Riyadh and its regional allies in any international talks about Iran’s nuclear programme. But it has repeatedly expressed its willingness to carry out a regional dialogue, which observers say Tehran wants tailored to its wishes and not to address the core issues of concern to the countries of the region. Such conditions have till now limited the chances of any real dialogue paving the way for reconciliation between Iran and its neighbours, analysts say.


Blinken warns off Turkey from buying more Russian missiles
The Arab Weekly/April 29/2021
WASHINGTON--US Secretary of State Antony Blinken said Turkey and all US allies on Wednesday should refrain from making further purchases of Russian weaponry, threatening the possibility of more sanctions.
Frayed relations between NATO allies Turkey and the United States were further tested over the weekend after President Joe Biden recognised the 1915 Armenian massacres as genocide, infuriating Ankara. Speaking at a virtual event at Washington’s Foreign Press Centre, Blinken said that, given Biden’s long-standing views on the Armenia issue, his decision was not and should not have been a surprise. Blinken also reiterated that Turkey was a critical NATO ally for Washington and said he hoped the two sides can resolve their issues. Nevertheless, he also warned Ankara against further purchases from Russia. Turkey has said it is in talks with Moscow on procuring a second batch of S-400 ground to air missiles. “It’s also very important going forward that Turkey, and for that matter all US allies and partners, avoid future purchases of Russian weaponry, including additional S-400s,” Blinken said. “Any significant transactions with Russian defence entities, again, could be subject to the law, to CAATSA, and that’s separate from and in addition to the sanctions that have already been imposed,” he said, referring to Countering America’s Adversaries through Sanctions Act, which is designed to dissuade countries from buying military equipment from Russia. Blinken also said the air defence system sales provided Russia with “revenue, access and influence.”US-Turkish relations have been strained over issues ranging from Turkey’s purchase of Russian S-400 air defence systems, over which it has been the target of US sanctions, to policy differences on Syria, human rights and a US court case targeting Turkey’s majority state-owned Halkbank. Washington in December imposed sanctions on Turkey over its purchase of Russian air defences, while Ankara has been angered that the United States has armed Kurdish YPG fighters in Syria and not extradited a US-based cleric Turkey accuses of orchestrating a 2016 coup attempt. On Friday, Biden, in his first call to the Turkish president since taking office in January, told Erdogan about his decision on Armenians. The US president had once described Erdogan as “an autocrat”. Blinken said the two leaders had a “good conversation” and that Biden was looking forward to meeting Erdogan in June on the sidelines of the NATO summit. Turkey’s presidential spokesman said on Sunday Biden’s declaration was “simply outrageous” and Turkey would respond over the coming months.


Lenderking embarks on new US push for de-escalation in Yemen
The Arab Weekly/April 29/2021
WASHINGTON--US Special Envoy for Yemen Tim Lenderking will travel to Saudi Arabia and Oman on Thursday for talks with government officials about efforts to end Yemen’s civil war, the US State Department said in a statement. Lenderking’s “discussions will focus on ensuring the regular and unimpeded delivery of commodities and humanitarian assistance throughout Yemen, promoting a lasting ceasefire and transitioning the parties to a political process,” the statement said. Lenderking “will build on the international consensus to halt the Houthi offensive on Marib, which only worsens the humanitarian crisis threatening the Yemeni people,” the State Department added. Last week, Lenderking called the battle for the Marib region the single biggest threat to peace efforts. He said Iran’s support for the Houthi movement was “quite significant and it’s lethal.”The battle for Yemen’s gas-rich Marib region is complicating US efforts to reach a ceasefire needed to end the war. Since taking office in January, US President Joe Biden has made Yemen a priority and appointed Lenderking to help revive stalled UN efforts to end a conflict widely seen as a proxy war between rivals Saudi Arabia and Iran. Saudi Arabia proposed a comprehensive ceasefire and a return to the negotiating table, a proposal that the Houthis immediately rejected, saying a blockade on the country must first be lifted. Lenderking’s visit to the region comes one day after Iran’s Foreign Minister Javad Zarif met Houthi militias’ spokesman Mohammed Abdul Al Houthi in Oman on Wednesday. During that meeting, Zarif reiterated Tehran’s support for a ceasefire and a return to talks to end the country’s long conflict, the Iranian foreign ministry said. On Tuesday, Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman bin Abdulaziz called on the Houthis to stop fighting and start peace negotiations. The Houthi spokesman and other leaders of the Iran-aligned militias live in exile in Muscat. Yemen’s conflict began after the Iran-aligned Houthi group ousted the country’s government from the capital Sana’a, prompting a Saudi Arabia-led military coalition to intervene in Yemen in 2015. The civil war has created what the United Nations calls the world’s worst humanitarian crisis, with some 80 percent of the country’s population of 29 million requiring aid and 13 million facing starvation.

Riyadh to close eight Turkish schools, likely ruffle Ankara

The Arab Weekly/April 29/2021
ISTANBUL--Saudi Arabia is set to close eight Turkish schools at the end of the current academic year, Turkey’s Anadolu state news agency reported Wednesday, a decision that could anger Ankara as it tries to improve ties with Riyadh. Turkey’s education ministry has been informed by the Saudi authorities that the eight schools will have to close at the end of the current school year, according to Anadolu. The eight establishments targeted have a total 2,256 pupils, it added. Turkey’s foreign ministry offered no comment. Last month the education ministry said there were 26 Turkish schools in Saudi Arabia. The closure of eight of them risks hiking tensions between the two countries. Relations between the two largely Muslim nations have plummeted in recent years, especially over the killing of Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi in the country’s consulate in Istanbul in 2018. Ankara used the case politically and diplomatically to pressure Saudi Arabia. In recent months, however, Turkey has made efforts to mend its relations with regional rivals across the Middle East, including Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates and Egypt. The Saudis and the Egyptians have been cautious about fully embracing the Turks, preferring to await tangible changes of policy that would go beyond declarations of intent. A key issue remains Turkey’s ties to the Muslim Brotherhood and its ambitions in the region. While Ankara still maintains a military base in Doha, Riyadh has in recent weeks established closer military cooperation with Turkey’s arch-enemy Greece to protect itself against missiles and drones from Yemen’s Houthis.

 

NATO Says Afghanistan Withdrawal Has Begun
Agence France Presse/April 29/2021
NATO has started the withdrawal of its mission from Afghanistan following a decision by President Joe Biden to bring U.S. forces home, an alliance official said Thursday. "NATO Allies decided in mid-April to start the withdrawal of Resolute Support Mission forces by May 1 and this withdrawal has begun. This will be an orderly, coordinated, and deliberate process," a NATO official told AFP. Members of the U.S.-backed alliance agreed this month to wrap up their 9,600-strong mission in Afghanistan after Biden made the call to end Washington's longest war. The decision -- which delayed by several months a deadline agreed by former U.S. leader Donald Trump -- came despite fears it could allow the Taliban to regain power in the country. The NATO official said the safety of the alliance's troops "will be a top priority every step of the way, and we are taking all necessary measures to keep our personnel from harm". "Any Taliban attacks during the withdrawal will be met with a forceful response. We plan to have our withdrawal completed within a few months," the official said, refusing to give any further details on the timeline. Biden said the US withdrawal would be completed by September 11, the twentieth anniversary of the 9/11 attacks on America that sparked its military involvement in Afghanistan.Germany's defense ministry has said it planned to get its 1,300 troops out of the country by early July.
- 'New chapter' -
NATO's training and support mission, which includes around 2,500 US troops and relies heavily on Washington's military assets, has personnel from 36 alliance member nations and partner countries. The US has said it is temporarily deploying extra troops to protect international forces as they withdraw and has prolonged the presence of an aircraft carrier in the region to support the pull-out. Trump struck a deal with the Taliban last year that was meant to see US and allied troops leave Afghanistan by the start of May provided attacks decreased and peace talks progressed. Biden decided to call time on the two-decade deployment of troops despite insurgent violence flaring and negotiations between the Taliban and the Kabul government stalling. The US insists it has achieved its aim of stopping Afghanistan serving as a "haven for terrorists" after uprooting Al-Qaeda networks, and says it risks a never-ending military involvement if it does not pull out. Top US general Mark Milley said Wednesday it was not possible to predict Afghanistan's fate after the withdrawal and warned of a "worst-case" outcome of a government collapse. But along with its fellow NATO members, Washington insists it remains committed to Afghanistan. "NATO Allies and partners will continue to stand with Afghanistan, its people, and its institutions in promoting security and upholding the gains of the last 20 years," the alliance said in a statement last month. "Withdrawing our troops does not mean ending our relationship with Afghanistan. Rather, this will be the start of a new chapter."

 

Palestinian Leaders Weigh Delay of Long-Awaited Vote
Agence France Presse/April 29/2021
Palestinian leaders were set to decide Thursday whether to hold elections next month as scheduled or call a delay that could trigger further frustration in a divided society which last voted in 2006. Palestinians in the Israeli-occupied West Bank and blockaded Gaza Strip have voiced hope that the polls could help restore credibility and heal rifts. Fatah, which controls the West Bank-based Palestinian Authority, reached an agreement with its long-standing rival Hamas, the Islamists who control Gaza, to hold legislative polls on May 22 and a presidential vote on July 31. The official Wafa news agency said Thursday that PA president Mahmud Abbas, also Fatah's leader, would chair a meeting "tonight in Ramallah that includes all the political factions to discuss the latest with the elections and whether they should be held or cancelled.""A final decision" would be made before Friday, Wafa reported. Hamas said Wednesday it "rejects any attempt to postpone the elections." Hamas won a surprise victory in the 2006 elections but it was not recognized by Abbas. The Islamists took power in Gaza the following year in a week of bloody clashes. Abbas critics charge that he is seeking to buy time as Fatah's prospects have been threatened by splinter factions, including one led by a nephew of iconic Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat and another by a powerful, exiled former Fatah security chief, Mohammed Dahlan."If Abbas delays elections, we will start with demonstrations," Daoud Abu Libdeh, a candidate with Dahlan's "Future" faction, told AFP in Jerusalem.
- Jerusalem -
Palestinians insist on the right to hold elections in Israeli-annexed east Jerusalem, which Palestinians claim as the capital of their future state. During the last Palestinian election, east Jerusalem residents cast ballots on the outskirts of the city and thousands voted in post offices, a symbolic move agreed to by Israel. Israel, which now bans all Palestinian political activity across Jerusalem, has not commented on whether it would allow voting in the city. In a meeting with EU diplomats this week, Israeli foreign ministry political director Alon Bar said elections were "an internal Palestinian issue, and that Israel has no intention of intervening in them nor preventing them."Wafa quoted top official Fatah Mahmoud Aloul as saying that holding elections that excluded Jerusalem would be "treason."Palestinian journalist and Abbas critic Nadia Harhash, a candidate on the "Together We Can" electoral list, said using Jerusalem as an excuse for postponement "is definitely not a smart move for the PA." She argued it would give Israel de facto veto power over the Palestinian right to vote. Hamas said a delay amount to a surrender to "the (Israeli) occupation's veto." Tensions in Jerusalem surged at the weekend as Palestinians clashed with Israeli police over the right to gather in an Old City plaza after evening Ramadan prayers. Following several days of unrest that left dozens injured, Israeli police removed the barricades blocking Damascus Gate, allowing Palestinians to resume their gatherings. Hamas said such "heroic victories" should encourage Palestinians to press ahead with Jerusalem voting.
Factions
The elections are seen in part as a unified effort by Hamas and Fatah to bolster international faith in Palestinian governance ahead of possible renewed U.S.-led diplomacy under President Joe Biden, after four years of Donald Trump that saw Washington endorse key Israeli objectives. Harhash argued that Abbas had hoped the elections would allow Fatah and Hamas to continue sharing power, but felt threatened by the emergence of strong splinter factions and the rise of new political groups critical of his leadership. The main challenges to Abbas include the "Freedom list" headed by Arafat's nephew Nasser al-Kidwa, which has been endorsed by Marwan Barghouti, who is serving multiple life sentences in Israel prison. Dahlan, who poses another threat, has been credited with bringing coronavirus vaccines into Gaza and distributing financial aid across the enclave, as well as in the West Bank.

India Covid Deaths Climb Again as Global Aid Flown In
Agence France Presse/April 29/2021
India's coronavirus disaster deepened on Thursday with the daily death toll climbing above 3,600 as dozens of countries sent urgent medical aid to help tackle the spiraling crisis. The United States and several European nations are starting to ease restrictions as vaccination campaigns pick up, but the pandemic is still worsening in many parts of the world. The World Health Organization issued a stark warning to European nations Thursday that relaxing Covid measures could spark a "perfect storm" allowing cases to spiral -- as in India. "It is very important to realize that the situation in India can happen anywhere," said WHO Europe chief Hans Kluge. Death and infection rates have been rising exponentially throughout April in India, which experts blame in part on mass gatherings. On Thursday, the south Asian nation reported 3,645 deaths over the past 24 hours, while confirmed new cases hit a new global record with more than 379,000. The official numbers are widely believed to be far below the reality. The pandemic has claimed at least 3.1 million lives around the world, with India accounting for more than 200,000 fatalities. In many Indian cities, hospitals are running out of beds as relatives of the sick crowd jostle for medicines and oxygen cylinders. "We rushed to multiple hospitals, but were denied admission everywhere," said the son of an 84-year-old woman who died at home this week after a desperate search for a hospital bed and oxygen in Kolkata, capital of West Bengal state.
The Indian government will open vaccinations to all adults from Saturday. It had previously limited shots to the over-45s and certain other groups. Several states have warned, however, they do not have sufficient vaccine stocks and the expanded rollout is threatened by administrative bickering, confusion over prices and technical glitches on the government's digital vaccine platform.
'Unprecedented situation'
More than 40 countries have committed to sending India vital medical aid, particularly oxygen amid a severe shortage, Foreign Secretary Harsh Vardhan Shringla said. The supplies include almost 550 oxygen-generating plants, more than 4,000 oxygen concentrators, 10,000 oxygen cylinders as well as 17 cryogenic tankers. Hundreds of thousands of doses of Covid-19 treatment drugs as well as raw materials to produce vaccines were also being sent. "It is an unprecedented situation... many countries have come forward on their own to offer us assistance," Shringla said. The United States is dispatching more than $100 million in supplies, with a flight due to arrive on Friday carrying including oxygen concentrators, cylinders, and other oxygen-generating equipment. The WHO has said the virus variant feared to be contributing to the catastrophe on the sub-continent has now been found in more than a dozen countries. But the body has stopped short of saying it is more transmissible, more deadly or able to dodge vaccines. Africa's disease control body also put out a warning that the continent could be overrun by infections if urgent measures are not taken to avert a similar disaster to India's."We cannot be indifferent to what is happening in India. We must act now, decisively and collectively," said John Nkengasong, director of the Africa CDC.
Lollipop tests
In the United States, President Joe Biden on Wednesday hailed his nation's inoculation progra as one of "the greatest logistical achievements" in American history. More than 234 million doses had been administered by Wednesday in the United States, according to the Centers for Disease Control. Countries are looking to do the same in Europe, and Germany hit a new record in daily vaccinations with 1.1 million people, Health Minister Jens Spahn said. That meant Europe's biggest economy for the first time vaccinated more than one percent of its population in 24 hours. The EU also inched further toward a Covid certificate for travel on Thursday, after the EU parliament approved the position it would take in talks with the executive branch and the bloc's members. And in France, where the rollout has stuttered, President Emmanuel Macron set out a timetable for a gradual lifting of Covid curbs from May 19 to the end of June. Amid concern that virus variants may spread quickly among youngsters, a lollipop-shaped test is being rolled out in some Austrian kindergartens. Burgenland province said it had already ordered 35,000 lollipop tests after a successful pilot scheme. "Put the test in the mouth, suck for 90 seconds, dip the test in the container, wait 15 minutes, check the result," the instructions read.


Israel is not prepared for the Palestinian elections - editorial
The truth is that the blame lies with the PA and Hamas. The problem for Israel is it allowed the slouching toward elections to occur without bothering to consider the various train-wreck outcomes.
Jerusalem Post editorial/April 29/2021
Palestinian elections scheduled for May could be postponed; a final decision is expected from Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas on Thursday evening. If this happens, blame will be cast on Israel, and the excuse will be a refusal by the government to allow Palestinians to vote in east Jerusalem.
The truth is that the blame lies with the PA and Hamas. They have prevented Palestinians from having any real say in their affairs for a decade and a half, ever since the last election – which saw Hamas win – was held in 2006.
The problem for Israel is that it has allowed the slouching toward elections to occur without bothering to consider the various train-wreck outcomes. What if the elections go ahead and Hamas wins? Would this lead to a repeat scenario of 2006, or would the PA have a civil conflict?
Hamas cannot be allowed to come to power in Ramallah, a move that would present an inevitable avenue to more conflict. This is a multisided conflict because Hamas not only wants to eradicate Israel but also wants to suppress Palestinians. Many Fatah officials have been tough on Hamas, and Hamas will want revenge. On the other hand, Israel has not appeared to really care about the outcome. While quietly admitting that a Fatah failure in the elections could hurt Israel, Jerusalem has made an effort not to interfere. Clearly, if Israel is seen to favor one side, that side may do worse.
But what happened to the possibility of creating some political capital from the recent Abraham Accords? Why didn’t the accords help new winds of peace blow in the West Bank? Rumors over the last year have indicated that Mohammad Dahlan, the former Fatah strongman in Gaza, has become close to Abu Dhabi, and there are hints he could seek a return to leadership.
Unsurprisingly, Hamas wants the elections to continue. It is unified in Gaza. It’s unclear if Fatah would even be allowed to campaign there. This presents a strange scenario in which a divided Fatah might go to elections knowing it can lose.
The elephant in the room here is not just the potential for chaos in the PA, but Israel’s own lack of a government. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has supported inertia and managing the conflict with the Palestinians, as opposed to actually initiating anything. He believes the status quo works in Israel’s favor.
According to this thinking, a divided PA and leadership mean that, in the long term, Israel is not confronted with a new intifada or international pressure. Israel has succeeded, for instance, in neutralizing Palestinian Islamic Jihad threats from Gaza, while maintaining a semblance of quiet with Hamas – shattered this week by rocket fire from Gaza. But in general, the security situation in the West Bank has been good.
Recent clashes in Jerusalem, however, show how things can spiral out of control. The mixed messages Palestinians received, with the installation and removal of barriers at Damascus Gate and clashes with police, leave many wondering what is going on. Ramadan is always a sensitive time.
Israel has a duty to protect its citizens from the kind of “TikTok” attacks that were filmed showing Arab youths attacking religious Jews. However, there appears to be no long-term vision in Jerusalem on this issue. Netanyahu is distracted by his failure to form a government. In that sense, Israel also remains stuck in a reality of continued coalition instability. This almost makes it seem that Fatah’s internal political chaos and Israel’s internal chaos are symbiotic – which allows Hamas and other extremists to make inroads.
The Jewish state needs to have a strategy with the Palestinians. Ignoring them hasn’t worked. “Managing the conflict” brings only temporary security but not any long-term conceptual change. If Israel is blamed for preventing the Palestinian elections, it will not be helpful in the country’s attempt to create a more positive image in Europe and throughout the region. This doesn’t mean that Israel needs to let voting take place in east Jerusalem, but it does need to hold serious discussions about the issue. With no functioning government, that does not seem likely to happen anytime soon.
 

The Latest LCCC English analysis & editorials from miscellaneous sources published on April 29-30/2021
Biden's first 100 days a rousing success by Trump's own measures - opinion

Douglas Bloomflield/Jerusalem Post/April 29/2021
Biden is not the best president (yet), but Republicans and Trump are working hard to make it seem like he is.
By DOUGLAS BLOOMFIELD APRIL 28, 2021 20:35
By a standard set by former US president Donald Trump himself, Joe Biden’s first 100 days have been a great achievement. The disgraced former chief executive liked to measure his success by the rising Dow Jones averages, taking credit every time they set a new record (and ignoring the drops, of course).
You may remember that Trump predicted that if Biden beat him, “there will be a market crash the likes of which has not been seen before!” Forbes magazine reported that a Biden boom began the day Trump lost and the Dow, S&P and NASDAQ have been soaring ever since, easily exceeding Trump’s first 100 days. CNBC called it “unprecedented growth.”
Biden ran on two basic promises: fighting the coronavirus and repairing the economy. He understood what his predecessor apparently could not; that the two are inextricably linked.
He has also restored dignity, compassion, sanity and civility to the office. That seems to trouble Texas Republican Sen. John Cornyn. A chronic tweeter in the Trump tradition, Cornyn has suggested there must be something wrong with Biden because he doesn’t tweet as incessantly as his predecessor.
“Is he really in charge?” the senator tweeted.
The San Antonio Current said Cornyn “tweets a lot of exceedingly stupid shit.”
Does Cornyn really think Trump’s incessant tweeting of lies, grievances and insults was an admirable quality to be emulated? As Biden was preparing to give his first presidential address to a joint session of Congress this week, House Republicans were holding their annual policy retreat in Orlando, which is 172 miles from Mar-a-Lago. Guess who wasn’t invited. But his specter hung over the gathering.
Trump deserves credit for launching Operation Warp Speed to develop a COVID vaccine, but tragically he lost interest too early, bungled the development and spread dangerous mistrust of any vaccine (suggesting Lysol injections didn’t help). He told Bob Woodward that he lied about the seriousness of the threat because he didn’t want to “panic” people. Public health experts report the resistance to vaccinations is strongest among Trump voters.
Instead of leading the nation’s fight to cure the pandemic, he attacked the integrity of scientists and local leaders calling for a tough response; he feared the truth would harm his reelection chances. By contrast, Biden took the opposite approach, even wearing a mask in public, which Trump refused because he feared it would make him look like a sissy.
Trump has been the sorest of sore losers, and he has been obsessed with reversing his election loss and undermining public confidence in American democracy and the electoral system.
With Trump’s blessing, even urging, Republican legislators and governors in red states across the country are changing voting laws to make them less democratic out of fear their states might be more Democratic (note the capitalization). At the same time, their party in the Congress is mounting solid opposition to voter access and campaign finance and ethics reform legislation.
The last thing Republicans want to see is an impartial investigation of the January 6 insurrection. Republican leaders in the House and Senate prefer to pretend it never happened. Instead, they demand probes of Black Lives Matter and the almost mythological Antifa. Lone among Republican leaders is Rep. Liz Cheney, who many colleagues consider a pariah for having voted to impeach Trump, who is calling for a narrowly focused commission on the attempted coup.
THE LINCOLN PROJECT tweeted, “The GOP has introduced 81 bills in 34 states to oppose rioting. Yet they don’t want to investigate an insurrection.”
Biden’s next big project is a $2 trillion infrastructure plan. Trump talked about infrastructure frequently but never produced a serious proposal. Republicans say they might consider a narrowly defined bill at a fraction of the price, but so far they’ve offered no details or any indications they’d even support their own bill. Biden has proposed raising taxes on the wealthiest Americans to pay for his plan, and Republicans are screaming “socialism.”
Former New Jersey governor Chris Christie, a 2024 presidential wannabe, said raising taxes on the super-rich to pay for infrastructure and social programs is “socialism” because it constitutes redistribution of wealth.
Republicans are still decrying Social Security 85 years after it was enacted and trying to repeal it through privatization. That’s not the only socialist project they oppose.
President Harry Truman once said socialism is what Republicans call social security, public power, farm price supports, federal bank deposit insurance, free and independent labor organizations and “almost anything that helps all the people.”
Former labor secretary Robert Reich has written, “America is a hotbed of socialism... for the rich.” That means federal bailouts, tax credits, subsidies and tax cuts for big corporations but “harsh capitalism” for their workers, who often got layoffs while the bosses got bonuses, were left “twisting in the wind.”
Republican leaders are fond of calling Biden a captive of the progressives, but that doesn’t hold much water since the progressives in his party are bitterly complaining he is ignoring them.
Polls show Biden’s approval rating is in the mid-50s percent range, compared to Trump’s, which was under water his entire term.
Biden’s handling of the pandemic and economic recovery enjoys bipartisan support at the grassroots, despite solid opposition by congressional Republicans whose mantra is “Just say no.” They firmly refuse to cooperate with Biden and then accuse him of breaking his promise of bipartisanship.
Republicans are also saying no to ethics legislation requiring the release of presidential tax returns and banning presidents from channeling government funds to their private businesses.
Republicans might have unanimously opposed Biden’s economic stimulus plan that included $1,400 checks for millions of Americans, but their constituents like it, which may explain why some shameless politicians like Sen. Roger Wicker (R-Mississippi), Rep. María Elvira Salazar (R-Florida) and Rep. Madison Cawthorn (R-North Carolina) who voted no are taking credit anyway.
Letting Biden and Democrats fight the pandemic and lead the economic recovery on their own, Republicans are turning their focus the culture wars issues such as immigration, LGBQT rights, abortion, bashing more holes in the church-state separation wall, guns and voter suppression.
Joe Biden is not another FDR, as pundits and critics like to tell us. He may not be the best president in history (yet), although Republicans and Donald Trump are working overtime to make it seem he is.

The ramifications of a US return to the 2015 Iran deal - opinion

Efraim Inbar and Eran Lirman/Jerusalem Post /April 29/2021

Washington will cast a dark shadow over Israel’s status as a key ally.
The US is keen to return to the 2015 nuclear deal with Iran (the JCPOA) and is likely to do so even though Iran is playing “hard to get.” (This assumes that Ayatollah Ali Khamenei indeed wants to renew the accord from 2015 in order to obtain sanctions relief).
The Biden administration’s declared intention of reaching a “better and longer lasting” follow-up agreement with Iran (focused on more effective inspections and Iran’s regional mischief and ballistic missiles) will be null and void if Iranian demands for full sanctions relief are met by the US. Such a concession would leave the US without any real leverage on Iran.Iran certainly will attempt to obtain an American commitment to prevent Israeli attacks on Iran, in line with Western commitment in the 2015 accord not to sabotage Iran’s nuclear facilities. Thus far, Washington has refrained from publicly criticizing Israel for its alleged attacks on Iranian targets. But if Washington agrees with Iran on a return to the JCPOA, Israel will be put in a difficult position. Does it continue covert action aimed at slowing the Iranian nuclear project, against the wishes of the Biden administration? And if covert operations exhaust themselves, will Israel risk conflict with the US by directly attacking Iranian nuclear facilities?
Even if the lifting of sanctions gives the Iranian economy only a gradual boost, Tehran’s position in the Middle East will be significantly strengthened and its aggressive behavior across the region will intensify – as it did after the 2015 accord was signed.
Worst of all, an American return to the 2015 agreement in defiance of Israel’s concerns on an issue that is vital to its security will cast a dark shadow over Israel’s status as a key American ally in the Middle East. And it would be wrong to assume that any “compensation” offered to Israel by the US will include armaments that will improve the attack capability of Israel against Iranian nuclear facilities.
Under these circumstances, Israel’s entente against Iran with the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain and Saudi Arabia may intensify. On the other hand, it also is possible that the Gulf Arabs will bandwagon with Iran when they see America withdrawing from the region and Israel’s hands tied by the US. The Biden administration clearly is less committed to the “Abraham Accords” than its predecessor. The seeds of a Saudi Arabia-Iran dialogue, brokered by Iraq, already are evident.
There also are question marks about the future of ties between Israel and Azerbaijan, a country in which Israel has important strategic assets. However, Baku is growing closer to Ankara, and this could lead Azerbaijan to adopt a less friendly approach toward Israel, especially if the US disregards Israel. Such a weakening of Israel’s strategic status, alongside the Biden administration’s friendlier approach to the Palestinians, may increase the latter’s demands on Israel. This could be accompanied by Palestinian violence.
IN THE FACE of these worrying trends, the following matters should be uppermost in Israel’s mind:
• Israel must unapologetically explain its diplomatic and security stance and equip its friends with clear talking points – that a return to the 2015 agreement is not (only) a threat to Israel, but will shorten the time for an Iran nuclear breakout and precipitate nuclear-weapons proliferation across the Mideast, including Turkey, Saudi Arabia and Egypt; a danger to the entire world.
• It is vital to preserve Israel’s freedom of action. A resolute Israeli position, backed by action against the Iranian nuclear project that threatens to cause nuclear proliferation throughout the Middle East will strengthen the Abraham Accords and prevent Saudi Arabia and the Gulf states from moving closer to Iran. Speaking out loudly in opposition to renewal of the JCPOA is an element in maintaining Israel’s freedom of action and deterrent ability. It is important to do so now, in real time.
• Jerusalem needs to prepare for heightened tensions with Washington and to attempt to temper this through diplomatic efforts in Congress, in the Jewish community, and with friendly groups in the US. Israel’s stance against the nuclear agreement still can receive considerable sympathy in the US.
• It is critical that these messages are conveyed by senior professional echelons, without partisan political messaging – Israeli or American. Even if there are disagreements with the Biden administration, the possibility of a US-Israel rift must be avoided.
• Israel should be prepared to defend itself against Iranian missile attacks from Lebanon, Syria, Iraq, and Yemen.
• Iran wants to surround Israel with missile bases. In this context, Jordan is likely to be a target for Iranian subversion. Strategically, Jordan is Israel’s “soft underbelly.” Therefore, Jerusalem must do what it can to help maintain the stability of Jordan.
Indeed, it will take a great deal of sophistication and skill to overcome the difficult situation in which Israel finds itself.
Efraim Inbar is president and Dr. Col. (Res.) Eran Lerman is vice-president of the Jerusalem Institute for Strategy and Security.

F-35: The UAE’s Lightning or a Lemon?
Andrew E. Harrod/International Policy Digest/April 29/2021
President Joe Biden on April 13 approved a $23 billion arms sale to the United Arab Emirates that his predecessor Donald Trump initiated, including the sale of 50 F-35 Joint Strike Fighters. While the deal makes strategic sense, with the F-35 the UAE has joined a wider debate over this stealth aircraft.
The arms deal buttressed Trump’s Abraham Accords, which opened official relations between Israel and the UAE. For Israel and the UAE, noted Middle East expert Walid Phares, “Israel will have access to a giant economy in the Gulf – a dream come true – and a partnership with the most advanced Arab country. The UAE will have access to Israel’s advanced technology, from agriculture to [its] military…cooperation will be a game changer.” The two countries face common threats like Iran and Sunni extremists, and some are hoping that the F-35 will contribute particularly to UAE’s defense against Iran in the region. Unconfirmed reports that three Israeli F-35s in 2018 flew over Tehran without detection by Iranian air defenses are particularly enticing in this respect.
Yet the F-35 itself is highly controversial. Some have praised the F-35s advanced capabilities like stealth radar evasion capabilities as a necessary counter to sophisticated capabilities of adversaries like China and Russia. Yet problems have plagued the F-35 since its development began in 2001, such that Georgetown University professor and army paratrooper veteran Sean McFate recently damned the F-35 as “obsolete junk” and a “flying lemon.”
For F-35 critics like McFate and Dan Grazier, the Jack Shanahan Fellow at the Project on Government Oversight, sticker shock alone raises alarm. “The F-35 is the most expensive weapon in history, with a projected lifetime cost of $1.7 trillion,” McFate has noted while the F-35 has hourly flying costs of about $44,000, although some see these costs decreasing over time. By comparison, older planes the F-35 is supposed to replace in the American military, like the A-10 and F-16, fly for about $20,000 per hour. As House Armed Services Committee Chairman Adam Smith (D-WA) recently noted, F-35 “sustainment costs are brutal,” which makes it unlikely the Pentagon will purchase 1,763 F-35s in the future.
As Time magazine’s Mark Thompson observed in 2013, these F-35s were supposed to serve in various variants for the Air Force, Marines, and Navy. This “flying Swiss Army knife” would be a multirole aircraft that could accomplish diverse missions like air-to-air fighting, bombing, and close air support. The resulting airplane was a “real-life example of the adage that a camel is a horse designed by a committee.
A U.S. Air Force A-10 flying over Afghanistan. (Matthew Bruch/U.S. Air Force)
McFate has noted that the venerable A-10, introduced into service in 1977, remains the king of close air support. Depending on the variant, Grazier has observed, the F-35 carries only 182-220 rounds for its 25-millimeter cannon, while the A-10 carries over 1,100 shells for its 30-millimeter gun. Unlike the A-10, the “F-35 cannot maneuver adequately at the slow speeds that searching for concealed and camouflaged targets requires,” and, “completely unarmored and highly flammable,” the F-35 is vulnerable to small arms fire.
McFate also marvels that the “F-35 cannot dogfight, the crux of any fighter jet.” A 2015 mock dogfight between an F-35 and an F-16 over the Pacific Ocean near California’s Edwards Air Force Base dramatized this point. The F-16 consistently outmaneuvered the F-35, even though two bulky drop tanks aerodynamically disadvantaged the F-16 against the F-35 without any attached ordinance. Compared to planes like the F-16, critics have noted that the “notorious gas-guzzler” F-35 also has limited range.
Whatever capabilities the F-35 does have often remained grounded, for the “F-35 is a hanger queen,” as McFate has noted. The F-35 still struggles to meet its goal mission-capable rate, the percentage of aircraft that can fulfill at least one mission. As of January, only 69 percent of F-35s meet this goal, while the military has a longstanding 80 percent goal.
Grazier has examined the inherent challenges stealth capabilities present in repairing a plane like the F-35. “It takes much longer to make some repairs to stealth aircraft because it takes time to remove low-observable materials, fix what is broken, and then repair the stealth skin.” For example, some F-35 adhesives for stealth materials can take a full week to completely dry.
The F-35s advanced systems have also suffered from numerous software bugs, as the F-35 has eight million lines of code, more than six times the F-18, an “inviting target for enemy cyber-warriors,” Grazier has noted. In addition, F-35s maintenance and logistics software has 24 million code lines, which enabled numerous failures in the F-35s Autonomic Logistics Information System. In 2020 the Pentagon scrapped ALIS and committed $500 million to build its replacement, the Operational Data Integrated Network.
The F-35 has suffered numerous other woes, like its own engine afterburners inflicting melting damage. “Nearly every time the engineers solve one problem, a new one is discovered. The F-35 still has 871 unresolved deficiencies, only two fewer than last year,” Grazier reported in March on a plane that was supposed to be operational in 2012. “As the F-35 enters its twentieth year, program officials have delayed the important full-rate production milestone indefinitely” and the F-35 “remains in every official sense nothing more than a massively expensive prototype.” Corresponding to this “complete boondoggle,” Christopher Miller, acting defense secretary in the final days of the Trump administration, called the F-35 “a piece of …”
Now Air Force leaders have “all but admitted what critics have been saying for many years,” recently noted Forbes magazine aviation analyst David Axe. The F-35 “is too expensive and unreliable for hard, day-to-day use” in America’s various military branches. While the Air Force has purchased 250 F-35s, it is now considering other alternatives to replacing about 1,000 aging F-16s, like a new lightweight fighter.
The recent delivery of the first F-15EX, an updated version of this fighter introduced in 1976, to the Air Force indicates current American airpower thinking. In a technological “high-low mix” the F-35 would fill strategic niche roles with its high technologies while less sophisticated, often older aircraft designs would remain airpower workhorses. “You don’t drive your Ferrari to work every day, you only drive it on Sundays,” Air Force Chief of Staff Gen. Charles Brown Jr. recently stated. The F-35 “is our ‘high end’ [fighter], we want to make sure we don’t use it all for the low-end fight.” Along with other F-35 users, the UAE will have to strike similar balances in a dangerous world.

Biden Acknowledges the Armenian Genocide; What of Other, Current Genocides?
Raymond Ibrahim/Gatestone Institute/April 29/2021
To his credit, Joe Biden has become the first sitting president formally to acknowledge the Armenian Genocide since it occurred over a century ago. On Armenian Genocide Remembrance Day, April 24, 2021, the American president issued a statement opening with the following words:
Each year on this day, we remember the lives of all those who died in the Ottoman-era Armenian genocide and recommit ourselves to preventing such an atrocity from ever again occurring. Beginning on April 24, 1915, with the arrest of Armenian intellectuals and community leaders in Constantinople by Ottoman authorities, one and a half million Armenians were deported, massacred, or marched to their deaths in a campaign of extermination.
Along with the 1.5 million Armenians, the Turks exterminated more than another one million Christians—including 750,000 Greeks and 300,000 Assyrians, as underscored by Congress’s Resolution 296. Passed in 2019, it acknowledges “the campaign of genocide against Armenians, Greeks, Assyrians, Chaldeans, Syriacs, Arameans, Maronites, and other Christians.” As the Guardian recently noted, “The slaughter is widely viewed as a crime on a monumental scale – and a grim precursor to the Nazi Holocaust.”
Successive Turkish regimes have vehemently denied that any genocide took place; all deaths, they claim, were uncalculated byproducts of war. Similarly, due to its status as a NATO ally—a status which has greatly soured in recent years—successive U.S. presidents failed to acknowledge Turkey’s role: Ronald Reagan passingly referred to the Armenian Genocide though without formally acknowledging it. George H. Bush, Bill Clinton, George W. Bush, and Donald Trump never formally acknowledged it. When he was running for president in 2008, Barack Obama professed his
firmly held conviction that the Armenian Genocide is not an allegation, a personal opinion, or a point of view, but rather a widely documented fact supported by an overwhelming body of historical evidence. The facts are undeniable…. [A]s President I will recognize the Armenian Genocide…. America deserves a leader who speaks truthfully about the Armenian Genocide and responds forcefully to all genocides. I intend to be that president.
Obama reneged on his word—including on the Armenian Genocide’s 100th anniversary, which passed under his tenure.
Accordingly, Joe Biden is to be commended for being the first U.S. president to acknowledge the genocide.
An even more laudable next step would be to acknowledge the current genocides and hate speech fueling them—and take steps against them, as Biden said he would in his recent April 24 statement recognizing the Armenian Genocide:
Today, as we mourn what was lost, let us also turn our eyes to the future—toward the world that we wish to build for our children. A world unstained by the daily evils of bigotry and intolerance, where human rights are respected, and where all people are able to pursue their lives in dignity and security.
Meanwhile, Turkey is all but spearheading a new genocide against Armenians, most recently in the context of the Nagorno-Karabakh dispute, which again erupted into armed conflict in late 2020. Turkey sponsored and transported Islamic terrorists to the disputed region, where they committed horrific atrocities against Armenians and their places of worship, including by such as “tortur[ing] beyond recognition” an intellectually disabled 58-year-old Armenian woman by hacking off her ears, hands, and feet—before murdering her. Her family was only able to identify her by her clothes.
As Nikol Pashinyan, Armenia’s prime minister, observed in October 2020: “Why has Turkey returned to the South Caucasus 100 years [after the dissolution of the Ottoman Empire]? To continue the Armenian Genocide.”
Even inside Turkey, hate speech against Armenians predominates, and begins in public school. Every day Turks—men and women—regularly and openly profess their greatest desire is to decapitate Armenians.
Turkey is, moreover, far from the only Muslim nation engaged in “daily evils of bigotry and intolerance,” which we need to “remain ever vigilant against,” to quote Biden. What several international organizations have referred to as a “genocide” of Christians at the hands of Muslims is currently taking place in Nigeria—as well as in Mozambique, South Sudan, and other sub-Saharan nations—and in dire need of being acknowledged so that efforts at rectifying the situation can begin.
Several more examples of other nations currently engaged in genocides appear here.
In his statement, Biden said, “[W]e remember so that we remain ever-vigilant against the corrosive influence of hate in all its forms…. We do this not to cast blame but to ensure that what happened is never repeated.”
Unfortunately, all of this is happening again, and at an alarming rate. As one example, 340 million Christians around the world—especially the Islamic world—are currently experiencing serious persecution. As commendable as it is for Biden to have recognized the Armenian Genocide, turning his attention to those who are currently experiencing hate and genocide would be far more practical—it would save lives—than acknowledging history.
 

To know what happens when presidents hinder state affairs, ask Lebanon and Tunisia
Mohammad Krishan/MEM/April 29/2021
In Lebanon, they have been waiting for six months; in Tunisia it's three months. The Lebanese are waiting for a new government, while the Tunisians are waiting for eleven new ministers to assume their duties after being given parliament's approval. Lebanon has not benefitted from a government, and Tunisia has not benefitted from its new ministers. The responsibility lies with the same office of state in both countries: the president.
If you speak to President Michel Aoun's supporters in Lebanon and those aligned with him about this situation, they will give you details of the merits of his actions. If you speak to President Kais Saied's supporters in Tunisia they will do likewise. The result is the same in both countries: an unnatural waiting period that has hindered state affairs and increased their weakness in the face of an economic crisis and critical healthcare situation due to the coronavirus pandemic.
Despite the importance of the arguments that Aoun's and Saied's supporters can present to justify their positions, we must look at the consequences. These confirm that what is happening in Lebanon and Tunisia is state paralysis that can only worsen the situation in both countries due to the stubbornness of two men who each think that they are the conscience of the nation and the most capable of finding the right solutions.
All states have their own laws and regulations, without which it is meaningless to use the word state to describe the institutions and structures that exist. When we say that a person is a statesman, we basically mean that this individual is characterised by awareness, prudence and broad-mindedness that makes them able, at certain critical moments, to distinguish between personal desires and the interests of the state. Not only this, but that this individual has the determination that allows them to resolve manners without hesitation in favour of the state, even if they suffer personally or appear to be the party backing down before their opponents.
So far, neither Aoun nor Saied seem to have such qualities, which suggests that matters may not make much progress in the immediate future, unless they come under international pressure that they cannot handle. If this happens — and nothing is certain — then the "concession" they will make will lose them any gains that they had made had they gone ahead on their own accord and in consideration of the greater good of the country, not because of foreign pressure that only makes the state more dependent on others and less in control of its own decisions. We must not forget, though, that there may also be foreign pressure in the other direction pushing Aoun and Saied to stand their ground for the benefit of who knows whom or what.
France has gone through three such periods, known as "cohabitation", when the president was forced to "live" in the same "apartment of government" with a prime minister who was not in agreement with him and did not belong to the same party. This was the case between President Francois Mitterrand (left wing) and Prime Minister Jacques Chirac (right wing) from 1986 to 1988; between Mitterrand and Edouard Balladur (right wing) from 1993 to 1995; and from 1997 to 2002 between the then President Chirac and Lionel Jospin (left wing). Chirac went through the experience from both sides of the fence.
The conclusion at the time was that despite the obstacles and sensitivities, political and state progress was made because the sense of the supremacy of the state, the spirit of the republic and the rule of law were what decided matters, not the whims of the individuals involved. Unfortunately, such a spirit exists in neither Lebanon nor Tunisia; it requires decades to establish and requires a different sort of individual.
Michel Aoun is a military officer who had a tumultuous short experience as head of a military government formed in the final moments of President Amin Gemayel's term in September 1988 before he fled to France where he lived in exile for fifteen years. Returning to Lebanon in 2005, he became an MP. In 2016 he was endorsed by Hezbollah, among others, and became president, as he had always wanted.
As for Kais Saied, before the 2011 revolution he was not known for any political or organisational activity. He was not known for any opinion or activity in support of democracy or denouncing tyranny during the era of the late President Zine El Abidine Ben Ali. Saied found himself known thanks to his television appearances, before becoming a presidential candidate and then president so easily that some people are still trying to get to the bottom of how it happened.
During the rule of the late President Beji Caid Essebsi, Tunisia experienced a similar situation as that being faced now. Prime Minister Youssef Chahed, who also came from nowhere to take office, made a cabinet reshuffle, which the president did not approve of but did not block, despite his personal bitterness towards Chahed, who went from friend to foe, and despite some incitement to block the reshuffle. Essebsi exposed this incitement himself when he said that he couldn't make such a move and that the interest of the state was above all else. The funny thing here is that Kais Saied, a citizen and professor of constitutional law at the time, supported him in this. Perhaps he has forgotten what happened then, but we haven't.
*This article first appeared in Arabic in Al-Quds Al-Arabi on 27 April 2021

Biden's Border
Chris Farrell/Gatestone Institute/April 29/2021
The surge of unaccompanied children and families to the southern border -- as well as the surge of non-marijuana drug trafficking across the border -- is a humanitarian crisis, a health crisis and a national security crisis.
The Biden administration has ordered the termination of all work. Construction sites and crews are, essentially, idle -- at the reported cost of more than $1 million dollars per day in Cochise County, Arizona alone. It is costing $1 million taxpayer dollars per day -- meaning more than $100 million so far for just one site -- to figure out how, exactly, to unwind the half-completed construction project .....
While you are considering the human and dollar costs of Biden's "children in cages," consider the construction sites and equipment staged in remote areas, or the drug loads packed into Chevy Suburbans, stripped of everything in the interior but the driver's seat, and painted matte black for their 2AM runs north through the dry arroyo beds into the United States.
Some of that equipment was looking for people other than illegal aliens -- other people (terrorists) bearing ill-will towards the United States. The radiological detection devices? Gone. The license plate readers and recorders? Gone.
Mexico is an utterly corrupt, failed narco-state. The "best" thing Mexico has going for it is the "efficiency" of the drug cartels.... Perhaps Biden's border legacy will be another type of 9/11 attack, launched across his now virtually non-existent border with Mexico?
Just west of Naco, Arizona, former President Trump's 30-foot border wall runs through the desert and begins to ascend through the Coronado National Memorial and into the Huachuca Mountains – until it doesn't. Work was not completed. The Biden administration has ordered the termination of all work. Construction sites and crews are, essentially, idle – at the reported cost of over $1 million dollars per day in Cochise County, Arizona alone. Pictured: Idle equipment at a wall construction base in Cochise County. (Image source: Chris Farrell)
The surge of unaccompanied children and families to the southern border -- as well as the surge of non-marijuana drug trafficking across the border -- is a humanitarian crisis, a health crisis and a national security crisis. It all belongs -- 100% -- to President Joseph Robinette Biden, Jr.
The illegal alien surge has been promoted and advertised for since June 28, 2019, when every single one of the Democratic presidential primary candidates raised their hands and said they would support free health care to all illegal immigrants in the United States. That was the first step in a cynical political ploy to permanently replace a segment of the American electorate with "more obedient voters from the Third World" -- while masquerading as compassion and care.
The Biden administration's "caged children" in the facility in Donna, Texas rightly get a lot of publicity -- but those are not the conditions along the entire southern border with Mexico. The facts and circumstances should not be lumped together or conflated. Naco, Arizona is not the Rio Grande Valley of Texas. Naco has different circumstances and challenges.
Just west of Naco, former President Trump's 30-foot wall runs through the desert and begins to ascend through the Coronado National Memorial and into the Huachuca Mountains -- until it doesn't. Work was not completed. The Biden administration has ordered the termination of all work. Construction sites and crews are, essentially, idle -- at the reported cost of over $1 million dollars per day in Cochise County, Arizona alone. It is costing $1 million taxpayer dollars per day -- meaning more than $100 million so far for just one site -- to figure out how, exactly, to unwind the half-completed construction project, what to do with the supplies, equipment, debris, access roads, staging areas, water wells and pumps, electrical conduits and sensor assemblies – the list goes on and on. Reportedly, the Biden administration even likes some of the proposed improvements -- but there is no way in hell they will ever agree to building that damn "wall." Trump simply cannot be given that victory, no matter how practical and effective it may be. No wall. No way.
In places where the wall was constructed, the Biden administration has ordered floodgates to be left open along the San Pedro River valley in Cochise County, Arizona. There is no reason to leave the floodgates open. Border Patrol representatives will tell you very earnestly that the floodgates are essential for our maintenance of the wall and to be in compliance with our treaty obligations. Those facts are true, but they have absolutely nothing to do with why the gates are open now. This is the driest year in living memory in Cochise County. The San Pedro is bone dry. Grazing lands are dead brown and Martian red. Local cattle ranchers are trucking-in hay and feed to keep their cattle from starving. The only things moving along the San Pedro are illegal aliens and drug smugglers. Sure, leave the gate open. It is the Biden administration now.
The point of this essay is to get across to you that the state of what little is left of the US-Mexican border is complex. Different sectors have different geography, different illegal alien populations seeking to cross, different drug loads moving through the ports of entry or the vast stretches of "nothing" in-between.
While you are considering the human and dollar costs of Biden's "children in cages," consider the construction sites and equipment staged in remote areas, or the drug loads packed into Chevy Suburbans, stripped of everything in the interior but the driver's seat, and painted matte black for their 2AM runs north through the dry arroyo beds into the United States.
On Biden's border, enforcement is a thing of the past. Border Patrol checkpoints in places such as Arizona Highway 90 between Sierra Vista and Interstate-10 are literally a shell of their former selves, stripped of all staff and equipment. Some of that equipment was looking for people other than illegal aliens -- other people (terrorists) bearing ill-will towards the United States. The radiological detection devices? Gone. The license plate readers and recorders? Gone.
You see, border security is about more than Biden's caged children. It is more sophisticated and complicated than that. Mexico is an utterly corrupt, failed narco-state. The "best" thing Mexico has going for it is the "efficiency" of the drug cartels. How utterly pathetic and dangerous is that? Perhaps Biden's border legacy will be another type of 9/11 attack, launched across his now virtually non-existent border with Mexico?
*Chris Farrell is a former counterintelligence case officer. For the past 20 years, he has served as the Director of Investigations & Research for Judicial Watch. The views expressed are the author's alone, and not necessarily those of Judicial Watch.
© 2021 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.
 

Turkey: How Erdogan's Pledge for Reform Collapsed in Five Months
Burak Bekdil/Gatestone Institute/April 29/2021
"We don't see ourselves elsewhere but in Europe," Erdoğan said on November 21. "We envisage building our future together with Europe."
According to Turkish news site Gazete Duvar, a total of 128,872 people have been indicted in the past six years for insulting Erdoğan. Of those, 27,824 had to stand trial and 9,556 were convicted.
Apparently, Erdoğan wants a democratic system without opposition.
But who cares about the Constitution in a country where the governing bloc is proposing to close down even the Constitutional Court, in addition to banning opposition parties? All these autocratic measures occurred in the less than half-year since Erdoğan pledged democratic reforms.
A few years ago, then Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoğlu had vehemently refuted claims that Turkey was a second-class democracy. He was right. Turkey has since remained a third-class democracy.
71-year-old journalist and author Ahmet Altan was released from prison in Turkey this month. He had been unlawfully imprisoned for nearly five years, since he was detained in 2016 over allegations that, during a TV program, he disseminated "subliminal messages" related to a coup attempt, as well as for articles he had written criticizing the government.
His critics often joke that when President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan pledges democratic reforms, one should run away immediately. His latest charm offensive in November, aimed at repairing Turkey's badly-strained ties with the West and Western institutions, has proven that the joke still holds value.
"We don't see ourselves elsewhere but in Europe," Erdoğan said on November 21. "We envisage building our future together with Europe." Two days later, Defense Minister Hulusi Akar described NATO as the "cornerstone of our defense and security policy" and said that Turkey was looking forward to cooperating with the incoming administration under Joe Biden in the United States. Erdoğan also promised a bold package of democratic reforms.
Less than five months later, Italy's Prime Minister Mario Draghi had to call Erdoğan a "dictator." That was not because an experienced European politician wanted to insult a Muslim head of state.
According to Turkish news site Gazete Duvar, a total of 128,872 people have been indicted in the past six years for insulting Erdoğan. Of those, 27,824 had to stand trial and 9,556 were convicted. By comparison, only 11 Turks had been convicted for insulting Ahmet Necdet Sezer, president between 2000 and 2007.
After Erdoğan's latest reform pledge, on March 21, Turkish authorities arrested a pro-Kurdish opposition MP who had refused to leave parliament for several days after his seat was revoked. Ömer Faruk Gergerlioğlu "was brought out by force while he was in pyjamas and slippers" by "nearly 100 police officers," the leftist Peoples' Democratic Party (HDP) said in a statement.
On March 17, the Supreme Court Chief Public Prosecutor's Office filed a lawsuit against HDP for its closure on the grounds that it has links with "terror acts." On April 14, state prosecutors asked for the removal of the parliamentary immunity of main opposition leader Kemal Kılıçdaroğlu and nine MPs from his Republican People's Party (CHP). Apparently, Erdoğan wants a democratic system without opposition.
This month, Europe's top human rights court ruled that the right to liberty and freedom of expression of Turkish journalist and author Ahmet Altan had been violated due to his detention and imprisonment on charges related to a 2016 coup attempt. Altan, 71, has been in prison since September 2016, when he was detained over allegations that, during a TV program, he disseminated "subliminal messages" related to the coup attempt, as well as for articles he had written criticizing the government. Shortly after that ruling, the Turkish Court of Appeals released Altan. In other words, Altan had been unlawfully imprisoned for 55 months, nearly five years.
That was "normal" in a country where an army of pro-government judges has the habit of announcing rulings in defiance of rulings from superior Turkish courts, including the Constitutional Court, and from the European Court of Human Rights. Those judges who dare make "undesirable verdicts" are probed and often get disciplinary punishments. Erdoğan's coalition partner and staunchest political ally, ultra-nationalist leader Devlet Bahçeli, has called for the closure of the country's top judicial institution, the Constitutional Court.
On April 5, Turkish prosecutors detained 10 retired admirals over their public criticism of Erdoğan's multi billion-dollar Istanbul canal project, which will create a new artificial waterway from the Black Sea to the Marmara Sea, to complement the Bosporus Strait. The arrest warrants came a day after a group of 104 former senior navy officials signed an open letter warning that the proposed canal could harm Turkish security by invalidating an 85-year-old international treaty (the Montreux Convention) designed to prevent militarization of the Black Sea. Pro-Erdoğan officials and prosecutors interpreted the statement as a direct challenge from the military to the civilian government, "echoing coup times."
The prosecutors' move is in direct breach of the Article 26 of the Turkish Constitution:
"Everyone has the right to express and disseminate his/her thoughts and opinions by speech, in writing or in pictures or through other media, individually or collectively. This freedom includes the liberty of receiving or imparting information or ideas without interference by official authorities. This provision shall not preclude subjecting transmission by radio, television, cinema, or similar means to a system of licensing."
But who cares about the Constitution in a country where the governing bloc is proposing to close down even the Constitutional Court, in addition to banning opposition parties?
All these autocratic measures occurred in the less than half-year since Erdoğan pledged democratic reforms. But no story would be completely Turkish without an element of black humor: Where is the $128 billion?
That sum refers to the US dollars sold by state banks to support the Turkish lira in foreign exchange markets. The policy began around the time of the March 2019 municipal elections and was ramped up in 2020, when the pandemic laid bare the lira's vulnerability and Turkey's reliance on external funding. Bankers have calculated that the sales totaled $128.3 billion in 2019-20.
As government officials remain mute on the question, the main opposition CHP recently launched a campaign to embarrass Erdoğan's ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP) by hanging huge posters on CHP party buildings across the country with the simple question: Where is the $128 billion? Not one more word. Not one single comment or insult. Just a question, though annoying especially at a time of economic crisis.
Turkish police started to rip down those posters without court orders. As one prosecutor confessed in a letter to a governor, "We cannot find a legal pretext to declare the posters illegal. You must rip them down citing administrative reasons."
In protest, a CHP MP hung the same poster outside his office office window in the parliament building. Parliament's administrative directors had to send a fire truck to rip down the poster. The MP said he would hang it again.
Erdoğan's effort to hang onto power is taking uglier shapes every new day. A few years ago, then Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoğlu had vehemently denied claims that Turkey was a second-class democracy. He was right. Turkey has since remained a third-class democracy.
*Burak Bekdil, one of Turkey's leading journalists, was recently fired from the country's most noted newspaper after 29 years, for writing in Gatestone what is taking place in Turkey. He is a Fellow at the Middle East Forum.
© 2021 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.


Those who yearn for war in Libya
Habib Lassoued/The Arab Weekly/April 29/2021
There are many who want a new war in Libya. Among them there those who do not want the elections to be held as scheduled on December 24.
There are also those who are looking for justifications to keep the Turkish forces and mercenaries in the country, and those who reject, not only the presence of Field Marshal Haftar as the head of the army, but the very existence of a national army. They want to substitute for the army a national guard that would simply protect the borders and facilities and not interfere with the warlords, smuggling barons, terrorist groups and those involved in corruption and plundering of public money and the thieves of oil and budget allocations.
Despite all the talk about the political agreement that was reached and the optimism about the arrival of the new authorities elected by the Forum for Political Dialogue, and despite the Geneva agreement, the efforts of the Joint Military Committee, UN Security Council decisions and the regional and international agreements, despite of all of that, the security situation in Libya remains fragile and the final ceasefire decision could be breached any time. This is especially true thanks to the absence of an effective decision to unify the military establishment, achieve reconciliation, implement a general amnesty, release detainees as well as the prisoners of war, and return the displaced.
Psychological and social barriers and hate speech have not diminished in intensity. There seem to be no takers of the domestic and external calls to turn the pages on the past, so that the process of political settlement can move ahead.
On Monday, a cabinet meeting was scheduled in Benghazi, under the chairmanship of the head of Government of National Unity (GNU), Abdulhamid Dbeibeh and in the presence of the President of the Presidency Council, Muhammad al-Menfi and his deputy from the Tripoli region, Abdullah al-Lafi.
But at the last moment, the meeting was postponed to an unspecified date. This was not just due to the arrival of a plane at Benina airport carrying dozens of armed militiamen who were sent to ensure the security of Dbeibeh and his ministers. These militiamen were sent despite the fact that the authorities of the eastern region had managed in past weeks to protect the visits of other senior GNU officials, including of Menfi, during his visit to Benghazi and during Dbeibeh’s own visit to Tobruk.
It is what Dbeibeh said when he spoke to a number of displaced persons from the east of the country who were sitting in a Tripoli café. He told them that Benghazi will return to the fold of the homeland.
Some explained that he meant to say that the city had been kidnapped by the army. The real reason is the lack of a genuine awareness that the solution must entail mutual recognition between all the main actors on stage.
When he met the field leaders in Tripoli and the warlords in Misrata, Debeibeh should have set a date for meeting with Field Marshal Haftar. He is the commander-in-chief of the military force that controls the entire eastern and southern regions and a big part of the central region. Dbeibeh should have sought that meeting especially since Haftar has played an important role in the political agreement reached at the Dialogue Forum, in its Tunisian and Swiss meetings, as testified by former UNSMIL chief Stephanie Williams herself. But Dbeibeh’s going to Benghazi without setting a date for a meeting with Haftar, deprived the visit of its meaning and indeed, undermined it altogether.
When Dbeibeh began to form his cabinet, he stipulated that the candidates should be able to work in all parts of the country without exception, but he was eventually unable to hold a meeting of his government in Benghazi. He was in fact forced to postpone it.
This raises an important question: How will he succeed in his mandate as head of government over all of Libya’s territory if he is not supported by the army leadership in the east of the country, which had provided him with an adequate security framework to obtain the confidence of Parliament in the city of Sirte, a location controlled by Haftar’s forces?
How will he obtain this support if he does not acknowledge that leadership? What prevents him from meeting with Haftar if he recognises it?
This is not the only issue.
A few days ago, Foreign Minister Najla Al-Manqoush spoke during a speech before the Italian Parliament about the necessity for all foreign forces and mercenaries to leave the country. Similar views were previously expressed at the UN Security Council, the Arab League, the European and African Unions, by the US government and most Western capitals and Arab countries. A regional and international consensus was reached about this. However, the forces of political Islam and the Turkish pressure group in Libya and abroad launched hostile campaigns directed against the minister. The campaign reached the point of levelling accusations of treason and apostasy. The reason for this was that she did not exclude the Turkish intervention in her call for foreign forces to leave, as if the Turk’s presence had become an inevitable fate or a sacred issue beyond reproach.
It also meant that there are still people betting on war and on the continuation of divisions, especially within the military establishment. That institution will not move towards unification as long as there are foreign fighters who support this or that party.
The unprecedented attack on Manqoush confirmed that there are those inside Libya who do not want to deal with the new reality created by the UN roadmap, nor with international developments, including the Security Council resolution announced on April 15, under Chapter Seven, which means possible international intervention. There is no realisation of the scope of the transformations in the region and the world.
There are those who want to remain under the protection of the Turkish forces and mercenaries, which means that they reject the stance of their country’s diplomacy in line with international positions in support of the choice of peace. It seems they desire war if they are not actually preparing for it.
The conflict has not ended in Libya, especially since there are parties that do not realise that the battle for peace is more difficult than the conflict, and this is why they made the cease-fire a starting point for a cold war that may turn hot on the ground at any moment.
Some still yearn for divisions. These are members of the Muslim Brotherhood who believe that Libya cannot accommodate them together with the army and Haftar. They believe reconciliation may inhibit them from continuing their policy of Islamist empowerment. These are also the regional leaders who speak with the logic of superiority and the legitimacy of controlling the country, the warlords who are not able to relinquish their interests, and the opportunists who do not want the state to take root nor for sovereignty to be established nor society to rise above the strife which has torn it apart for ten years.
Libya today needs a discourse of reason to prevail before the country is totally shattered. It needs a spirit of positive adventure to preempt the designs of those seeking to sabotage the political process, opposing those who would like to overcome pain and wounds and turn over the page of the past and advance instead the logic of a peace of the brave in order to roll back the legacy of war and conflict.
People should not listen to the Brotherhood’s narrative which favours a political solution only if it serves the group’s interests and achieves its goals.
And if they do not reach their goals, Brotherhood members would be willing to obstruct the settlement even if that leads to the fragmentation of the country. For them a small region under their control is better than a vast country outside of their influence.

Iran, the Competing Power Centers and Middle Eastern Imbroglios
Charles Elias Chartouni/April 30/2021
شارل الياس شرتوني: تنافس مراكز القوى في إيران ووضع الشرق الأوسط المعقد
http://eliasbejjaninews.com/archives/98375/98375/

The released tapes of the oral history project unveils the rifts amongst the Iranian regime power centers and brokers, the competing political visions and strategies, and their incidence on regional and international policy making. Foreign minister Jawad Zarif statement reveals the internal cracks of the Iranian regime, the dwindling influence of Ali Khamenei, and the overriding hold of the Revolutionary Guards. He dwelt extensively on the role of Qassem Suleimani who worked diligently on sabotaging the nuclear accord of 2015, and expanding the scope of the Iranian destabilization strategy throughout the Middle East, jointly with Russia and the satellite movements he created in Lebanon, Syria and Iraq. The aim of the sabotaging strategy was to forestall the normalization of the Iranian status within the international community, usher the second wave of Iranian imperialism inaugurated by the nascent Islamic revolution, undermine the likelihood of a moderate version of the ongoing regime, and thwart the dynamics of liberalization in the Iranian civil society which already lives in a post-Islamic era.
J.Zarif highlights the pervasiveness of these cleavages and their relationship with the prevailing revolutionary power structure, its embryonic contradictions, unending power struggles and inwardness, since they all revolve around the regime’s survival. The cynical and subversive nature of the Iranian regime far from being incidental, temporary and tendentially accommodating, reflects its totalitarian propensities, the foreclosures and vested interests of the power elites who controlled it from the very beginning. Power turfs and struggles are systemic features that are hardly reformable and unlikely to yield an alternative political culture, unless the regime implodes and gives way to contending views and power elites. The statement of minister J. Zarif caused a major uproar within the ruling revolutionary guard and was tantamount to Suleimani’s assassination, since it displayed the glaring divisions and their incidence on the regime’s future, and ability to project itself as a cohesive actor in the nuclear negotiations. How can Iran engage the US and the international community while unable to mend its internal rifts, feature a united stand on regional issues, and muster support within its national community.
The discrepancies highlighted by Foreign minister Zarif validate the conventional perception of the Iranian regime’s reluctance to normalize, abide by the rules of international civility, and engage consensual conflict resolution regionally and internationally. This disclosure far from being accidental, brings out the serious differences among the dominating oligarchs, the depth of cultural wars within Iran, and the inability to deal with the international community on the very basis of an undercut consensus, deception, active insurgencies, militarization scenarios and low intensity conflicts. This open divergence aired right before presidential election (June 18th, 2021) is inevitably impacting its outcome, the future of negotiations, and enlightening insofar the prospects of normalization of the Iranian regime.
The pessimistic views of minister Zarif are quite inauspicious, and sound a dire warning on the whereabouts of a regime whose survival is the only stake that matters. The death of Suleimani was a timely admonition which recalls the need to sway a malevolent totalitarian dictatorship, checkmate its sabotaging politics, sustain Iranian internal liberalization, and force a comprehensive diplomacy. The negotiation script should preempt the segmented approach, based on the separation between the nuclear dossier and the disruptions of Iranian power politics throughout the Middle East, and dissipate the whims of an international counter-order adumbrated by Khomeiny and recapitulated by Ahmadi-Nejad and Suleimani. The subtexts of negotiations being as relevant and decisive as their unfolding and awaited outcomes.