English LCCC Newsbulletin For Lebanese, Lebanese Related, Global News & Editorials
For August 13/2020
Compiled & Prepared by: Elias Bejjani
#elias_bejjani_news

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Bible Quotations For today
To what should I compare the kingdom of God? It is like yeast that a woman took and mixed in with three measures of flour until all of it was leavened
Saint Luke 13/18-21/:”He said therefore, ‘What is the kingdom of God like? And to what should I compare it? It is like a mustard seed that someone took and sowed in the garden; it grew and became a tree, and the birds of the air made nests in its branches.’ And again he said, ‘To what should I compare the kingdom of God? It is like yeast that a woman took and mixed in with three measures of flour until all of it was leavened.’


Titles For The Latest English LCCC Lebanese & Lebanese Related News & Editorials published on August 12-13/2021
Mes sincères condoléances/Jean-Marie Kassab/August 12/2021
MoPH: 1817 new coronavirus infections, four deaths
Parliament Session on Port Case Adjourned due to Lack of Quorum amid Protests
President Aoun discusses path of forming new government PM-designate
Lebanon's Central Bank Ends Subsidies for Fuel Imports
 Aoun chairs meeting attended by Ministers of Finance, Energy, and Central Bank Governor
Aoun Summons Salameh over Lifting of Fuel Subsidies
Report: Baabda Meeting May Agree New Fuel Subsidies Rate
Diab Calls Emergency Meeting, Says Salameh's Decision Illegal
Israel says it downed Hezbollah drone that crossed from Lebanon
Bassil Vows Action over Salameh's 'Coup'
Bassil Slams Some Blocs' Bid to 'Prevent Judiciary from Unveiling Port Blast Truth'
Lebanese Block Roads after Decision to End Fuel Subsidies
Jumblatt stresses wanted in Khaldeh incident must be handed over: Salameh's decision unescapable
Loyalty to the Resistance: Central Bank Governor’s decision to lift fuel subsidy rejected
Winners and losers in the ‘resistance game’/Khaled Abou Zahr /Arab News/August 12/202

Titles For The Latest English LCCC Miscellaneous Reports And News published on August 12-13/2021
Yair Lapid’s visit set to intensify ties between Israel and Morocco/Mohamed Alaoui/The Arab Weekly/August 12/2021
With Pakistani help, Turkey reaches out to Taliban as they capture more territory
Taliban seizes Afghan Army corps headquarters, 2 northern airports/Bill Roggio/DD's Long War Journal/August 12/2021
Trump blames Biden for ‘unacceptable’ violent surge by Taliban in Afghanistan
Egypt army kills 13 extremists in north and central Sinai
Statement on behalf of United Nations Special Envoy for Syria Geir Pedersen
Syrian Shops Attacked in Turkey after Deadly Scuffle
Israel to Okay 2,000 New Settler Homes Says Security Source
Palestinian Groups in Gaza Committed 'War Crimes' Says HRW
Taliban Move Closer to Afghan Capital after Taking Ghazni City
Algeria Wildfires Kill 42, Authorities Blame Arson
Eight Feared Dead as Russia Tourist Helicopter Crashes into Lake
Sudan and war crimes court inch closer to Darfur trials
Trudeau to call for Canada snap elections: Media reports

Titles For The Latest The Latest LCCC English analysis & editorials from miscellaneous sources published on August 12-13/2021
OPEC+ should not give in to request to increase supply immediately/Cornelia Meyer/Arab News/August 12/202
Iran must pay for attacks on commercial shipping/Dr. Majid Rafizadeh/Arab News/August 12/2021
Afghanistan at the crossroads as civil war looms/Andrew Hammond/Arab News/August 12/2021
The rich world’s super-spreader shame/Ngaire Woods and Anna Petherick/Arab News/August 12/2021
Erdogan’s Turkey is a key patron of global efforts to delegitimize Israel/David May/Aykan Erdemir/ Washington Examiner/August 12/2021
German Appeasement Of Khamenei Endangers Iranians And The World/Benjamin Weinthal/Ellie Cohanim/Iran International/August 12/2021
Analysis: Somaliland’s lingering jihadi threat/Caleb Weiss/DD's Long War Journal/August 12/2021
How the Abraham Accords have influenced Arab-Israeli relations, one year on/Rebecca Anna Aproctor/Arab News/August 12, 2021
Abraham Accords, one year later: The inside story/Seth J. Frantzman/jerusalem Post/August 12/2021

The Latest English LCCC Lebanese & Lebanese Related News & Editorials published on August 12-13/2021
Mes sincères condoléances.
Jean-Marie Kassab/August 12/2021
http://eliasbejjaninews.com/archives/101328/jean-marie-kassab-mes-sinceres-condoleances-%d8%ac%d8%a7%d9%86-%d9%85%d8%a7%d8%b1%d9%8a-%d9%83%d8%b3%d8%a7%d8%a8-%d8%aa%d8%b9%d8%a7%d8%b2%d9%8a-%d8%a7%d9%84%d8%b5%d8%a7%d8%af%d9%82%d8%a9/
La Republique Libanaise est morte, mais le Liban demeurera à jamais.
Je n'irai pas à l'enterrement, mais j'irai cracher sur les tombes de ceux qui l'ont vendue, pillée et livrée à l'occupant.
Une nouvelle république renaîtrait bientót à condition que le peuple s'unisse et remplisse le vide , même de force.
A condition aussi que le chef de l'armée honore son serment de protéger cette nouvelle république. Partagé par les tiraillements et les pressions subies par les suppôts de l' occupant et son rôle principal qui est de respecter la democratie , il a tardé à faire ses choix.
Qu' attendez vous Joseph Aoun? Quelle république voyez vous? Oû est elle ? A Baabda, occupé par un allié aux Iraniens, de son aveu? A l' Unesco squatté par des bandits , Unesco qu' il faut incendier avec ses occupants et les voir bruler vifs comme les 214 victimes du port? Au sérail hanté par un fantôme fanfaron et bon à rien?
Je ne vous demande pas de prendre le pouvoir, je vous demande de le donner . De le rendre au peuple Libanais et de le protéger comme la prunelle de vos yeux.
L'histoire parlera de vous comme étant le sauveur du Liban , comme tant de patriotes du monde libre qui n'ont rien pris et tout donné.
Il est temps Joseph Aoun, grand temps. Les aiguilles de la liberté tournent à grande vitesse.
Il est temps...

MoPH: 1817 new coronavirus infections, four deaths
NNA/August 12/2021 
Lebanon has recorded 1817 new coronavirus cases and four deaths in the last 24 hours, as reported by the Ministry of Public Health on Thursday.

Parliament Session on Port Case Adjourned due to Lack of Quorum amid Protests
Naharnet/August 12/2021
A parliament session on the port blast case was adjourned Thursday due to lack of quorum, parliament's secretary Adnan Daher said. The parliamentary attendance reached 39 lawmakers. The Free Patriotic Movement, the Lebanese Forces, the Progressive Socialist Party, the Armenian bloc and several independent MPs boycotted the session. The families of the victims of the port explosion and a number of activists had blocked the road between Verdun and UNESCO in protest against the session. MPs were supposed to discuss a controversial parliamentary petition aimed at prosecuting three MPs summoned by Judge Tarek al-Bitar in the port blast probe. The families had affirmed that the protests will continue "even if Speaker Nabih Berri cancels the session." They stressed that they "will not grow tired until the immunities are lifted." The protesters chanted slogans against parliament and anyone who refuses to lift immunities, describing the session as a "session of shame."

President Aoun discusses path of forming new government PM-designate
NNA/August 12/2021
President of the Republic, General Michel Aoun, received Prime Minister-designate, Najib Mikati, this afternoon at Baabda Palace. The path of forming the future government and the latest governmental developments were addressed in the meeting.After the meeting, PM Mikati told reporters: "God willing, we will continue next week”.—Presidency Press Office

Lebanon's Central Bank Ends Subsidies for Fuel Imports
Associated Press/August 12/2021
Lebanon's central bank said overnight it will provide a line of credit for fuel importers at market price, ending subsidies on the scarce resource. The move is likely to send prices soaring in a country already in the throes of an economic crisis. The decision comes amid an unfolding energy crisis that has plunged the country into hours of darkness, threatened hospitals and businesses with shutdown and sparked deadly violence among consumers and motorists looking for fuel. The shortages are blamed on smuggling, hoarding and the cash-strapped government's inability to secure deliveries of imported fuel. The crisis worsened when authorities began to reduce subsidies on fuel amid a deepening financial crisis unfolding since 2019. The Lebanese currency has plummeted and now sells at over 20,000 Lebanese pounds to the dollar on the black market while the official rate is fixed at 1,500 pounds for $1. The price of a gallon of fuel has increased by more than 220% in the last year, triggering panic and a thriving black market. In a statement, the central bank said the decision to provide credit to importers at market price will be effective Thursday and new prices will be determined by the Ministry of Energy. The central bank's foreign reserves have been depleted in past months in the import-dependent country, where medicine, fuel and basic needs have been running short and a black market has been thriving. The move may ease some of the shortages but is likely to heighten social tension in the small country where over 50% of the population has fallen below the poverty line. The financial crisis - rooted in years of corruption and mismanagement - took hold since 2019. It has been made worse by the failure of political leaders to agree on a new government to chart a path out of the crisis and negotiate a recovery package with the International Monetary Fund. A caretaker government has been in charge since last year. The fuel crisis has turned violent before, with motorists clashing at gas stations after long waits and fuel running out. On Monday, at least three people were killed in violence over access to fuel, reflecting the growing frustration over a continued problem that has only gotten worse.

 Aoun chairs meeting attended by Ministers of Finance, Energy, and Central Bank Governor
NNA/August 12/2021
President of the Republic, General Michel Aoun, chaired a meeting attended by Minister of Finance Ghazi Wazni, Minister of Energy and Water Raymond Ghajar, and Governor of the Banque du Liban, Riad Salameh. The meeting was attended by former Minister Salim Jreissati, and Director General of the Presidency of the Republic, Dr. Antoine Choucair. At the beginning of the meeting, President Aoun stressed that the BDL Governor’s decision has serious social and economic repercussions that are reflected at all levels, especially the livelihoods and the daily needs of citizens, pointing out that the Supreme Defense Council did not take any decision yesterday related to lifting subsidies, which is originally outside its jurisdiction. The discussion focused on the financing card law and its compelling reasons that link the lifting of subsidies to the issuance of this card, as well as the exceptional approvals of the Council of Ministers that authorized the Banque du Liban to use the mandatory reserve to open credits for the purchase of fuel and its derivatives, provided that they are paid at the price of 3900 pounds to the dollar, instead of 1500 pounds. President Aoun also called on the BDL Governor to adhere to these texts in any action he takes, and after coordination with the procedural authority entrusted with the constitution to set the state’s general policy in all fields. In addition, the President asked Minister Ghajar to control the distributed and stored quantities of fuels so as not to manipulate their prices and monopolize them.—Presidency Press Office

Aoun Summons Salameh over Lifting of Fuel Subsidies

Naharnet/August 12/2021
President Michel Aoun summoned on Thursday Central Bank Governor Riad Salameh after his decision to lift subsidies on fuel, the Presidency said. The bank had said overnight it will provide a line of credit for fuel importers at market price, ending subsidies on the scarce resource. The move is likely to send prices soaring in a country already in the throes of an economic crisis.

Report: Baabda Meeting May Agree New Fuel Subsidies Rate
Naharnet/August 12/2021
President Michel Aoun held a meeting Thursday with Central Bank Governor Riad Salameh and the caretaker ministers of energy and finance, hours after Salameh announced the end of fuel subsidies in a controversial move.
The Presidency said Aoun stressed during the meeting that Salameh’s decision “has dangerous social and economic repercussions.”“The subsidization of fuel will not return to the previous state and what is happening now is an attempt to agree on a new (dollar) exchange rate at which subsidization would take place in order to open (new) lines of credit by the central bank,” al-Jadeed TV reported. LBCI television meanwhile said that no agreement was reached at the meeting and that Salameh insisted on halting fuel subsidization “unless parliament issues a legislation legalizing spending from the (central bank) reserves.”

Diab Calls Emergency Meeting, Says Salameh's Decision Illegal

Naharnet/August 12/2021
Caretaker Prime Minister Hassan Diab on Thursday called for an emergency ministerial meeting to discuss Central Bank Governor Riad Salameh's controversial decision to lift subsidies off fuel imports. Diab also asked caretaker Finance Minister Ghazi Wazni to tell Salameh that his decision is "illegal." In a statement, Diab said Salameh's decision "violates the law issued by parliament about the ration card as well as the government's policy as to the rationalization of subsidies." He noted that the government had repeatedly stressed that "subsidies should be rationalized, not lifted, in parallel with the approval of the ration card which would help citizens bear the cost of this rationalization." Diab also asked Wazni to inform Salameh of the content of the memo to "act accordingly and do what's necessary as quick as possible."
The caretaker PM added that Salemeh's move "does not take into consideration the deep economic and social crisis and would have very dangerous repercussions on the country." "Two days ago, we finalized the implementation mechanism of the ration card and the execution has become imminent. The decision to end subsidies could have waited until the (ration) card becomes in use," Diab went on to say.

Israel says it downed Hezbollah drone that crossed from Lebanon
Reuters/12 August ,2021
The Israeli military said on Thursday it downed a drone belonging to the Lebanese Hezbollah group that crossed into Israeli airspace from Lebanon. In a brief statement, it said the incident occurred on Wednesday. “Our troops monitored and successfully downed the drone,” the military said. “We will continue to operate in order to prevent any attempt to violate Israeli sovereignty.” The statement gave no technical details about the drone, but Israeli media reports said it was unarmed and likely on a reconnaissance mission. Tensions flared along the Israeli-Lebanese border last week, with Hezbollah launching rocket attacks that drew Israeli air strikes and artillery fire. But both sides targeted open ground, suggesting neither was interested in wider conflict. Israel and Hezbollah last fought a war in 2006. Last week’s flareup coincided with wider regional tensions with Iran, which has denied US, Israeli and British allegations it was behind a July 29 attack on an Israeli-managed oil tanker in the Gulf in which two crew members, a Briton and a Romanian, were killed.

Bassil Vows Action over Salameh's 'Coup'

Naharnet/August 12/2021
Head of the Free Patriotic Movement Jebran Bassil said that the "sudden" lifting of subsidies by the Central Bank governor Riad Salameh is "a violation of the government’s decision and of Parliament's law." Bassil tweeted on Thursday that the BDL is an independent public body "subject to the government and its decisions," and said that the central bank decision is "unilateral" and "sudden.""The government has decided on a plan to gradually lift the subsidies, and has issued a law for an electronic cash card," Bassil clarified. He added that "this is a new coup," calling on the FPM and the Lebanese to "get ready for action."

Bassil Slams Some Blocs' Bid to 'Prevent Judiciary from Unveiling Port Blast Truth'
Naharnet/August 12/2021
Free Patriotic Movement chief MP Jebran Bassil on Wednesday noted that Thursday's parliamentary session is "illegitimate." It does not conform to "the legal mechanism stipulated by Article 93 of parliament's bylaws and Articles 20 and 22 of the penal code for trials before the Higher Council (for the Trial of Presidents and Ministers), which strips the session of its legality and renders all its measures illegal," Bassil tweeted. "The FPM's principled stance is in favor of lifting the immunities that prevent the prosecution of those responsible for the port blast, and we reject the attempt by some in parliament to bypass the judiciary and prevent it from continuing the investigation to unveil the truth," Bassil added. "We will not tolerate the concealment of the truth," the FPM chief stressed. Thursday's session -- which will be boycotted by the FPM, the Lebanese Forces, the Progressive Socialist Party, the Armenian bloc and several independent MPs -- is dedicated to discussing a controversial parliamentary petition aimed at prosecuting three MPs summoned by Judge Tarek al-Bitar in the port blast probe. The petition calls for the Higher Council for the Trial of Presidents and Ministers to look into the charges instead of Bitar, who is the lead investigative judge named by the Higher Judicial Council -- the country's top national security court. The Higher Council for the Trial of Presidents and Ministers consists of eight judges and seven MPs. It was only activated twice in Lebanon's history -- in 1993 and 1999.

Lebanese Block Roads after Decision to End Fuel Subsidies
Agence France Presse/August 12/2021
Angry residents blocked roads across Lebanon Thursday, a day after the central bank said it could no longer afford to prop up fuel imports except at the black market rate. As Lebanon's economy crumbles and its foreign reserves dwindle, the decision has been considered a de facto lifting of fuel subsidies. The national news agency said people blocked roads in the north, south and east of the country. AFP correspondents saw motorists in long queues outside petrol stations still open, after they rushed to fill up before the energy ministry officially announced the new prices. The cost of petrol is expected to at least triple, according to projections by the Information International think tank. In front of one petrol station in Beirut, Hussein Majed asked how everyone was expected to cope. "You're going to force us to steal just to fill up a moped," he raged. "When the judge asks, we'll say it was to buy petrol, eat and drink."
The Lebanese pound has lost more than 90 percent of its value against the dollar on the black market in less than two years. Officially, however, the currency has remained pegged at 1,507 to the greenback. Until recently, hydrocarbon importers were given access to dollars at the advantageous official rate. But authorities last month increased it to 3,900, sparking a sharp rise in prices at the petrol pump.On Wednesday, the central bank said it would further increase to the "market rate", which is currently hovering at around 20,000. The bank said it had spent $800 million on fuel imports in July. The outgoing premier, Hassan Diab, has protested against the bank's unilateral decision. Foreign reserves have plummeted by more than half since the economic crisis started in the autumn of 2019, from $32 billion to around $15 billion today, according to central bank figures.

Jumblatt stresses wanted in Khaldeh incident must be handed over: Salameh's decision unescapable
NNA/August 12/2021
Head of the Progressive Socialist Party Walid Jumblatt affirmed, in a press conference held in Clemenceau that "the decision of Governor of the Central Bank Riad Salameh is unescapable, and aims at stopping the smuggling operations to Syria. The solution lies in the ration card and improving public transportation."
Tackling the Shwaya incident, he said "We are dealing with it alongside the Army."
Moving on to the recent Khaldeh clashes, Jumblatt said "some of the Khaldeh clans did not hand over the wanted men. I have decided to keep myself distanced from this issue and leave it in the hands of the army and security forces, but I do stress the need to extradite the wanted persons."Jumblatt also announced that he "had assigned PM-designate Najib Mikati to choose the appropriate ministry for the segment we represent, in cooperation with President Michel Aoun."

Loyalty to the Resistance: Central Bank Governor’s decision to lift fuel subsidy rejected
NNA/August 12/2021
The "Loyalty to the Resistance" parliamentary bloc on Thursday held its regular meeting at its headquarters in Haret Hreik, headed by MP Mohammad Raad.
“Lebanon and the Lebanese are subjected to a hostile tyrannical attack taking advantage of the country’s unbridled crisis, which has resulted from bad policies that have been governing the country, and the pervasive and widespread corruption,” a statement issued in the wake of the bloc’s meeting said. “It is no secret that the goal behind this aggressive attack is to besiege the Lebanese people, weaken their will to steadfastness, try to isolate the resistance forces, and insist on establishing deterrence equations for the Zionist enemy and its expansionist schemes,” the bloc’s statement added. Moreover, the bloc said that it had discussed various possibilities and adhered to the proposals it had previously submitted to the House of Parliament, one of which included a constitutional amendment to Articles 70 and 71 related to trying prime ministers and ministers. “The other includes an amendment to the powers of the Supreme Council to try presidents and ministers, while the third proposes complete lifting of immunities,” the statement added. Last but not least, the bloc deemed the Central Bank Governor’s decision to halt fuel subsidies utterly rejected. “This decision falls outside the context of any rescue plan and is in violation of the policies that had been decided by the government and approved by the House of Parliament when approving the ration card in support of poor families and called for its implementation before any other measure,” the statement added.

Winners and losers in the ‘resistance game’
Khaled Abou Zahr /Arab News/August 12/202
When we approach problems and issues in the Middle East, we invariably look at the region as a complicated and difficult one. Yet, there is a simple step that could bring greater stability to the region instantly: An end to interference in the domestic affairs of other countries. Indeed, meddling in domestic affairs has been one of the main issues facing the Middle East for far too long.
Undoubtedly, the situation has improved since the 1980s when there were many more regimes with active strategies to disrupt, challenge or create instability in neighboring countries, although a discussion on the role of some international NGOs should also be initiated. However, the interference I refer to is the active planning of terrorist actions or similar activities, such as providing financial and logistics support, sending weapons and/or giving refuge to known terror actors.
If we do a recap of the countries active in the 1980s, we will mainly find Iran, Iraq, Syria, Libya and to a lesser extent Sudan. The list today has changed. Saddam Hussein and Muammar Qaddafi are figures of the past, and their countries have shifted from being troublemakers to becoming the ground for confrontation. Sudan has also changed. The list is now mainly Iran and Syria.
In short, things did not end well for Arab regimes that were involved in regional expansion plans or disruptive policies. Their populations are still paying the price. The non-Arab troublemakers have been left untouched and are still active. Iran is still heavily involved in attacks; the recent tanker strike is a clear example of this impunity. It also still sends weapons and support to the Houthis, Hezbollah and the armed militias in Iraq.
Countries such as Iran have been using a so-called resistance leitmotif to justify their nefarious foreign policies toward the Middle East. In reality, it is nothing but an expansionist policy as ugly as every previous version in history. In the greater scheme of things, they have failed in their objective for total control and succeeded only in plunging the weaker links, such as Lebanon, into chaos.
Yet, when evaluating their track record, they must realize it is a small, if not puny, reward. They have plunged their economy into the abyss and ignored their population’s well-being just to succeed in creating chaos in Lebanon. Is it worth it? A behemoth potential economy is being destroyed just so Hezbollah chief Hassan Nasrallah can enjoy his Lebanon. What a bad deal for Iran.
What I find strange is that Western progressive voices praise Iran and other countries actively engaged in disruptive behavior as resistance fighters or heroes while criticizing Arab countries’ actions. Yet, they also condemn and try to disrupt Arab countries that respect international laws and are focused on their own domestic development programs, expanding their economies and improving their populations’ well-being.
It is high time for the region to change and develop a new model that breaks the vicious circle of interference. Arab countries have already moved on. Now is the time for Iran and others to follow.
Thankfully, as is the case with negative interference, Arab countries no longer engage in this form of blackmail. It is, in fact, the regimes that play the resistance game that seek Western approval and always frame the dialogue in opposition to their neighbors. This shows, if any proof were needed, that there is no resistance, merely rhetoric and a means to an end. A very expensive one, too.
Nevertheless, there is an opportunity, albeit slim, for things to change. With the US retreating, it is time to discuss not whether Russia or China will fill the void and how to leverage this situation, but how to develop a new plan to bring stability as well as much-needed economic and social transformation to the region. It should start with two steps: A noninterference pact followed by a trade and investment agreement that will include a massive infrastructure investment plan.
First, every country in the Middle East must agree to stop financing, supporting and sheltering groups that seek to destabilize or attack the sovereignty of any other. All networks must be dissolved and groups disarmed. In a prosperous Middle East, there is no place for armed militias threatening and attacking states. There is no reason for their existence. The false narrative of resistance and standing against evil imperialism needs to be dropped as well. The moment these points are agreed, local actors in Yemen, Iraq, Lebanon, Libya, and Tunisia will find common ground and put their own countries on the right track. Even Palestinian rights will find a way.
The second step is to unlock real opportunities for trade and investment. Our region needs to unlock a massive infrastructure and development plan to prepare us to become a regional platform capable of competing with the rest of the world. This is how and where a better future for all the region will be built. It could also encompass the greater Middle East and Central Asia as both regions have many common characteristics, and broader platforms empower, unlocking bigger markets and drawing larger investments. The domestic progress in the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) states serves as a clear way forward.
On that point, there is a revealing factor. Despite Central Asia’s delicate balance of power between China, Russia and the US/EU, there has been a strong focus on development of trade and investment. Iran and Turkey have good, respectful and prosperous relations with countries in Central Asia. Iran does not finance or support militias there, and has considerate and positive relations with a focus on economic exchange. Maybe it is also because Tehran knows that China or Russia would not tolerate this interference.
Yet, one can legitimately ask why not have the same situation in the Middle East? It is high time for the region to change and develop a new model that breaks the vicious circle of interference. Arab countries have already moved on. Now is the time for Iran and others to follow.
• Khaled Abou Zahr is CEO of Eurabia, a media and tech company. He is also the editor of Al-Watan Al-Arabi.

The Latest English LCCC Miscellaneous Reports And News published on August 12-13/2021
Yair Lapid’s visit set to intensify ties between Israel and Morocco
Mohamed Alaoui/The Arab Weekly/August 12/2021
RABAT--The visit of Yair Lapid, Israeli Foreign Minister, to Morocco accelerated the pace of the resumption of relations between the two countries, as it reflected an Israeli desire to strengthen economic and diplomatic relations between the two countries through the signing of a series of agreements in various fields. In a meeting with Yair Lapid on Wednesday, Moroccan Foreign Minister Nasser Bourita pointed out that since the signing of the tripartite agreement between Morocco, Israel and the United States, relations between the two countries have gone through a “positive dynamic”, which included the setting up of five working groups in the fields of innovation, tourism, aviation, energy and trade. At a joint press conference, Bourita stressed that Morocco aims to buttress the relations of the two countries with a human dimension, pointing to the launch of direct flights between the two countries and the “enthusiasm this has sparked among Israeli citizens of Moroccan origin to visit the kingdom.”Moroccan researcher Hichem Moatad told The Arab Weekly that Israel wants to gain the friendship of Morocco and is keen on deepening the bonds of strategic cooperation between the two countries at all levels and to exchange scientific expertise. He described the Israeli expectations as going beyond the notion of gradual resumption of ties advocated by Rabat.
On Wednesday, Lapid began his visit to Morocco, as the first Israeli minister to visit the Kingdom, since the resumption of diplomatic relations between Rabat and Tel Aviv.
The Israeli foreign minister indicated that his country will work with Morocco to put on track economic, tourism and cultural cooperation that would reflect the deep historical relationship between the two countries.
Bourita and Lapid signed three agreements, the first a memorandum of understanding on creating a mechanism for political consultation between the two countries’ foreign ministries, the second an agreement on cooperation in the field of culture, youth and sports, and the third a regional services agreement between the two countries.Diplomatic sources told The Arab Weekly, “Morocco has taken the decision to restore bilateral relations with Israel after examining all the aspects accompanying this decision and the resulting bilateral obligations.”
The sources pointed out to the existence of a Moroccan political will to work towards implementing all the signed agreements and to take time to transform them into actionable programmes. They stressed also that bilateral cooperation with Israel has not affected Rabat’s vision of peace in the Middle East, but rather helped flesh it out.
Bourita indicated that talks with his Israeli counterpart touched on peace in the Middle East. saying that peace negotiations are the only way to reach a final and comprehensive solution to the conflict. Moroccan political analyst Naoufel Bouamri told The Arab Weekly that Morocco has proven its ability to manage the resumption of ties with Israel gradually, and in a manner that takes into account Morocco’s interests first. On December 22, 2020, Morocco and Israel signed four agreements in Rabat, on the sidelines of the signing of an agreement to resume relations between the two countries. The four agreements were related to the exemption from visa requirements for holders of diplomatic and official service passports, a memorandum of understanding in the field of civil aviation as well as a memorandum of understanding on “innovation and the development of water resources.”
The fourth agreement provided for reviving economic relations between the two countries through trade and investment, in addition to negotiating other agreements that that would regulate other aspects of the bilateral relationship. Among the results of the resumption of ties between Rabat and Tel Aviv is the launch of the first direct air link between the two countries at the end of last July. This step will be followed by the launch of two new connections between Israel and both Casablanca and Marrakesh. This service will be operated by Royal Air Maroc and low-cost Air Arabia in October. Next Sunday, as was announced last Sunday by the director of the Israeli liaison office in Rabat, David Govrin, on his Twitter account. The two countries are expected to set in motion a bilateral agreement in the field of cybersecurity, which includes scientific cooperation, research and development, and is the first of its kind between Israel and Morocco in the field of cyber-defence. Israeli airlines want to conduct flights to Morocco in addition to Air Maroc, which would lead to a tangible increase in tourism activity between the two countries.
The delegation accompanying the Israeli foreign minister includes Moroccan-born Minister of Labour and social Affairs Meir Cohen, the chairman of the Knesset’s foreign affairs and defence committee, Ram Ben Barak, as well as the director general of the Israeli ministry of foreign affairs, Alon Oshbiz, and Inbar Zucker, an official at the ministry of health. The delegation’s makeup reflects the importance of defence and health issues in the development of bilateral cooperation.
Tel Aviv also wants to boost the volume of trade between Morocco and Israel. So far, the level of bilateral trade has amounted to more than four million dollars per month, according to the Israeli Central Bureau of Statistics, which noted a slight improvement in trade relations between the two countries.


With Pakistani help, Turkey reaches out to Taliban as they capture more territory
The Arab Weekly/August 12/2021
ANKARA--Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan on Wednesday said he could meet with the leader of the insurgent Taliban group in an attempt to “help secure peace” in Afghanistan and position Turkey as a reliable NATO ally as militants make new advances. Taliban fighters have captured more than a quarter of Afghanistan’s provincial capitals in less than a week. Turkey currently has troops in Afghanistan as part of a NATO force and has offered to secure the strategic Kabul airport after US forces leave by the end of August. Experts see Turkey’s offer as a high-risk bid to improve Ankara’s strained ties with Washington. Keeping the air hub safe from advancing Taliban forces became a major issue after US President Joe Biden called an end to Washington’s 20-year involvement by ordering all troops out of Afghanistan. Kabul airport offers the safest route for embassy staff and humanitarian aid to reach the war-torn country. Its fall could leave Afghanistan largely cut off from the world. Discussions continue between Turkish and American officials, and Turkey says it would secure the airport if diplomatic, financial and logistical conditions were met. “The latest developments and the situation of the Afghan public are really, really troubling,” Erdogan said during a televised interview with CNN Turk. “Maybe I will even be in a position to receive the person who is their leader,” Erdogan said, after referring to efforts by Turkish officials for talks with the Taliban. Erdogan last month said Turkey would hold discussions with the Taliban as part of the peace process. “Why? Because if we do not get a control of things like this at a high level, it won’t be possible to secure peace this time in Afghanistan,” he added.
Domestic fears
Erdogan’s more pressing domestic concern is the Turkish public’s fear of a wave of people fleeing Afghanistan as the insurgent group gains greater control over the country. Turkey hosts 3.6 million Syrian refugees, and as the Turkish economy deteriorates, intolerance towards them has grown with the main opposition calling for them to go. Erdogan stressed that Turkey had the issue under control with walls being built in the country’s east and south. “Whether at the border with Iran or Iraq, our walls are rising significantly right now. These rising walls are to prevent illegal migration to our country,” he said. US President Joe Biden ordered the American military’s withdrawal from Afghanistan before September 11, 2021, the 20th anniversary of the 9/11 attack on the US by Afghanistan-based Taliban-backed Al-Qaeda. Turkey is for now still intent on running and guarding Kabul airport after other foreign troops withdraw from Afghanistan, but is monitoring the situation after rapid advances by Taliban insurgents, two Turkish officials told Reuters. Taliban fighters took control of another city in northern Afghanistan on Wednesday, the eighth provincial capital to fall to them in six days, as US-led foreign forces complete their withdrawal. Turkey has offered to deploy troops at Kabul airport after NATO withdraws and has held talks with the United States for weeks. In exchange, President Tayyip Erdogan has asked for financial, logistical and diplomatic conditions to be met. “For now nothing has changed regarding the TAF (Turkish Armed Forces) taking control of Kabul Airport. The talks and the process are continuing,” a senior Turkish official told Reuters. “Work is continuing on the basis that the transfer will happen, but of course the situation in Afghanistan is being followed closely.”The Taliban have warned Turkey against keeping troops in Afghanistan to guard the airport.
Pakistani support
In comments to foreign media in Islamabad on Wednesday, Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan said after talks with Turkish Defence Minister Hulusi Akar that efforts would be made to facilitate talks between the Taliban and Ankara.
“The best thing is for Turkey and the Taliban to have a face-to-face dialogue. So both can talk about the reasons why Kabul airport has to be secured,” Khan said. “And so we will be talking to the Taliban, to use our influence on them, to have a face-to-face talk with Turkey.”A Turkish security official said Turkey was continuing to assess developments in Afghanistan. “There is no change in view concerning the taking control of Kabul Airport. But the situation in Afghanistan is changing from day to day,” he said..


Taliban seizes Afghan Army corps headquarters, 2 northern airports
Bill Roggio/DD's Long War Journal/August 12/2021
The Taliban seized control of the Afghan National Army’s 217th Pamir Corps headquarters, as well as airports in Kunduz City and Shibirghan, as their onslaught in the north continued on Wednesday. The group is now consolidating recent gains in Kunduz and Jawzjan provinces, where these strategic holds will deny the Afghan military the ability to counterattack. Afghan security forces retreated to the Pamir Corps headquarters and the airport south of Kunduz City on Aug. 8 after the Taliban overran the provincial capital. The Afghan troops held out for three days before surrendering. The Taliban seized all weapons, ammunition, vehicles and other military equipment at the at the Pamir Corps headquarters. In Jawzjan province, the Taliban captured the airport outside of the capital of Shibirghan today, and netted a large quantity of weapons, including U.S.-supplied Humvees, Ranger pickups, small arms, and ammunition. The Taliban seized control of Shibirghan on Aug. 7. The remaining Afghan forces retreated to the airport and held out for four days before surrendering.
The loss of the Pamir Corps headquarters is a major blow to the morale of the Afghan National Army, as it marked the first corps command to fall since the Taliban initiated its offensive on May 1. More importantly, the loss of the headquarters and the airports in Kunduz City and Shibirghan will deny the Army military the ability to launch counterattacks in the two provinces and relieve the siege of the key city of Mazar-I-Sharif in nearby Balkh province. The Taliban controls the roads leading to these two cities, and the only way for the Afghan military to retake them is by reinforcing the units based at the airports via air.
The Taliban’s offensive is designed to deny the Afghan government its key base of support in the north, while battling Afghan forces in the south and east. If these key regions can be secured, the Taliban will advance on the capital of Kabul.
In all, nine of Afghanistan’s 34 provincial capitals have fallen to the Taliban in the past five days. Seven of them are in the north, while two are in the west. On Aug. 6, the capital of the southwestern province of Nimruz, Zaranj, was lost after the governor and security forces abandoned the city. The next day, on Aug. 7, the Taliban seized control of Shibirghan, the capital of the northern province of Jawzjan. The following day, on Aug. 8, the Taliban overran the capitals of Kunduz, Sar-i-Pul, and Takhar provinces, also in the north. On Aug. 9, the Taliban took control of Aybak in Samangan. The Taliban seized control of Farah City in Farah province, Pul-i-Khumri in Baghlan province, and Faizabad in Badakhshah, the former headquarters of the Northern Alliance, on Aug. 10.
The Afghan government and military have yet to answer the Taliban’s offensive. The government has resorted to clinging to cities and a handful of key districts – and still completely under water, has been unable to break the Taliban’s momentum.
*Bill Roggio is a Senior Fellow at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies and the Editor of FDD's Long War Journal.

Trump blames Biden for ‘unacceptable’ violent surge by Taliban in Afghanistan
AFP, Washington/12 August ,2021
Former president Donald Trump blasted his successor Joe Biden on Thursday for putting no conditions on the US withdrawal from Afghanistan and said that a violent Taliban surge in the war-torn country was “not acceptable.”Trump said the US pullout, which Biden has set for August 31 and which is already all but complete, would have been “a much different and much more successful withdrawal” if he were still president. It was under Trump that the US brokered a deal with the Taliban in Doha in 2020 that would have seen the US withdraw all its troops by May 2021 in exchange for various security guarantees from the militants. When Biden took power earlier this year, he pushed back the deadline for the withdrawal and set no conditions for it. “If I were now president, the world would find that our withdrawal from Afghanistan would be a conditions-based withdrawal,” Trump claimed in a statement. “I personally had discussions with top Taliban leaders whereby they understood what they are doing now would not have been acceptable,” he said. “It would have been a much different and much more successful withdrawal, and the Taliban understood that better than anyone,” he said.
Trump, who despite his election loss remains the biggest single force in the opposition Republican party, did not provide any details of what he would have done to halt the advances of the insurgents. Authorities in Kabul have now effectively lost most of northern and western Afghanistan and are left holding a scattered archipelago of contested cities also dangerously at risk. Some US officials fear the Taliban could take over Kabul within three months of the August 31 deadline. The United States signed the agreement with the Taliban in Doha on February 29, 2020, committing to a pullout of US and NATO troops by May 1, 2021, in exchange for security guarantees. They included a promise by the militants to hold peace talks with the government in Kabul, to not attack the US or its interests, and to not support groups like al-Qaeda in attacking the United States. In the wake of the agreement the Trump administration sharply cut the number of US forces inside Afghanistan and remained committed to the May 1 deadline, even as the Taliban accelerated its offensive against government security forces following the Doha deal. Trump’s troop reductions continued after he lost the November election to leave the number at 2,500, along with some 16,000 civilian contractors, still in Afghanistan when Biden took office on January 20. Biden paused further withdrawal for a review of policy, and in April announced that the pullout would go ahead, pushing the deadline back initially to September 11, 2021, before moving it up again to August 31.

Egypt army kills 13 extremists in north and central Sinai
Ismaeel Naar, Al Arabiya English/13 August ,2021
Egypt’s army has killed 13 extremists in the restive areas of north and central Sinai during an operation on Thursday, according to a statement. “To complement the efforts of the armed forces to eliminate terrorist elements in central and northern Sinai, the counter-terrorism forces were able to eliminate 13 extremist fighters,” the army said in a statement released to reporters. The army also said it had confiscated 15 automatic rifles and a number of ammunition of various calibers alongside 20 automatic rifle magazines, and a number of other weapons as well. “The motorcycles used by the extremist fighters carrying out their terrorist operations, a number of mobile phones, 2 field glasses, and sums of money in various currencies were also seized,” the army said. The Egyptian army said nine soldiers were killed during the operations.

Statement on behalf of United Nations Special Envoy for Syria Geir Pedersen
NNA/UNIC/August 12/2021
The following is a statement on behalf of the United Nations Special Envoy for Syria Mr. Geir O. Pedersen. “At today’s International Syria Support Group’s (ISSG) Humanitarian Task Force meeting, convened virtually in Geneva, the UN Special Envoy for Syria Geir O. Pedersen expressed his growing concern regarding developments in southern Syria. Increased hostilities, which have included heavy shelling and intensified ground clashes, have resulted in civilian casualties, as well as damage to civilian infrastructures. Thousands of civilians have been forced to flee Daraa al-Balad. Civilians are suffering with acute shortages of fuel, cooking gas, water, and bread. Medical assistance is in short supply to treat the injured. The situation is alarming.  The Special Envoy reiterated his calls in his 31 July statement for an immediate end to the violence and for all parties to uphold the principle of the protection of civilians and civilian objects, in accordance with international humanitarian law. He also stressed that immediate, safe and unimpeded humanitarian access must be granted to all affected areas and communities, including Daraa al-Balad, and that the near siege-like situation must end.  The Special Envoy and his team continue to engage with all relevant parties on the ground and internationally to end the crisis, warning that there is the potential for increased confrontations and further deterioration unless there is an immediate calm and a political way forward. The Special Envoy also continues to hear from people in Daraa, including civil society representatives on the ground, who have expressed grave fears for their safety. Tensions continue elsewhere, with a notable escalation of violence in northwest Syria; and multiple water security challenges persisting in the northeast.  These coupled with the increasingly precarious situation in the southwest once again are illustrative of the need for a nationwide ceasefire and a comprehensive political solution in line with Security Council resolution 2254 (2015).  The Special Envoy further recalls the importance of the recent passage of Security Council resolution 2585 (2021) and urges all concerned to focus on its full implementation.”

Syrian Shops Attacked in Turkey after Deadly Scuffle
Agence France Presse/August 12/2021
Dozens of angry Turks smashed up shops and cars believed to belong to Syrian migrants in the capital Ankara, prompting police to intervene, media reports said Thursday. The unrest broke out late Wednesday in response to a fight between local residents and people believed to be Syrian migrants in which one Turkish national was stabbed to death, the reports said. Images on social media showed dozens of shouting men breaking through police cordons and then attacking cars and shops believed to be owned by Syrian families. "The demonstrations and events that took place in our Altinag district this evening have come to an end as a result of the composure of our citizens and the hard work of our security forces," the Ankara governor's office said on Wednesday night. "Our people are kindly requested not to give credence to provocative news and posts," it said in reference to the fight that provoked the unrest. The Anadolu state news agency said two "foreign nationals" have been arrested and charged with homicide in connection the deadly fight. The unrest in Ankara comes with polls showing anti-migrant sentiments riding high among many Turks. Turkey has become home to 3.6 million Syrians under a deal it struck with the European Union in 2016 to help avert the continent's migrant crisis. The sides are currently working on updating the agreement. Ankara has received billions of dollars of funding in exchange for setting up camps in the southeast that are now home to more than four million people in all.
Turkey's main opposition party last month made waves by vowing to send Syrians "back home" if it came to power in a general election scheduled for 2023. Turkey's well-respected Teyit fact-checking platform has been debunking numerous negative social media posts about migrants -- many of them Afghan -- this week. The issue is gaining added attention out of fears that Taliban militants' sweeping gains in Afghanistan will result in a mass exodus of people from the war-torn country once the last US and NATO troops leave in the coming weeks. Turkey is on one of the main transit routes for Afghans seeking shelter in Europe.

Israel to Okay 2,000 New Settler Homes Says Security Source
Agence France Presse/August 12/2021
Israel is to approve 2,000 new homes for Jewish settlers in the occupied West Bank, defense sources said Thursday, despite opposition from dovish members of the governing coalition. The Palestinians swiftly condemned the latest settlement expansion plans, the first of Prime Minister Naftali Bennett's administration. A security source told AFP the permits for Jewish settlements would come alongside approvals for hundreds of Palestinian homes in the large swathe of the West Bank known as Area C, where Israel exercises military and planning control. "There is an expectation to approve about 1,000 housing units for Palestinians in Area C next week and 2,000 housing units in the Jewish communities," the source told AFP on condition of anonymity.  The office of Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas expressed its "strong rejection and condemnation" of the new settler homes, saying they contradicted "the clear American position" President Joe Biden expressed in a call with Abbas. Biden is reportedly to meet with Bennett in the near future, though his office did not specify a date. Bennett, a former director of the Yesha Council settler lobby, faced criticism from dovish partners in his coalition, as well as from Israeli settler advocates in the opposition. Israel seized the West Bank and east Jerusalem from Jordan in 1967. Since then, nearly 700,000 Israelis have moved into settlements that most of the international community regards as illegal. Palestinians hope the territories will become part of a future state. Seven lawmakers from the dovish Meretz party, three of them, ministers wrote to Defence Minister Benny Gantz opposing the approval of more homes for settlers. "Settlements are immoral, settlements are illegal, they endanger our relations with Palestinians and the world," Meretz lawmaker Mossi Raz told public radio. But he stopped short of threatening to quit the ruling coalition. Opposition lawmaker Bezalel Smotrich of the nationalist Religious Zionism bloc said on Twitter that approving homes in Palestinian towns was "harming Israeli communities". According to an analysis by settlement watchdog Peace Now, the Higher Planning Council of the Civil Administration intends to approve about 860 homes for Palestinian villages, and just shy of 2,000 units in settlements.

Palestinian Groups in Gaza Committed 'War Crimes' Says HRW
Agence France Presse/August 12/2021
Deadly rocket and mortar fire on Israeli cities by Palestinian militant groups during a May conflict in and around Gaza constituted war crimes, Human Rights Watch said Thursday. The New York-based rights group analysed attacks from Gaza that resulted in the deaths of 12 Israeli civilians and injuries to dozens more. Rockets that misfired or fell short also killed or wounded "an undetermined number of Palestinians in Gaza," the group said, with at least seven Palestinian civilians killed.  The rockets were fired during an 11-day conflict that saw Israel pound Gaza with air strikes as militants in the blockaded enclave fired more than 4,000 rockets towards Israel. Israeli strikes killed some 260 people in Gaza, including militants, while munitions from Gaza killed 13 people in Israel, including a soldier. The report comes a day after the UN Palestinian refugee agency UNRWA condemned "the existence and potential use by Palestinian armed groups" of tunnels under its schools in Gaza, saying they placed pupils and staff "at risk". The agency issued its statement following a demand by Israel's ambassador to the United Nations, Gilad Erdan, to freeze its funding after Israeli public television reported Hamas blocked UN inspectors from inspecting a tunnel near an UNRWA school. Human Rights Watch previously accused Israel of war crimes for strikes that killed dozens of civilians despite "no evident military targets in the vicinity" during the conflict that ended with a May 21 ceasefire. In Thursday's report, the rights group cited statements by Gaza's Islamist rulers Hamas and other militant groups announcing barrages of rockets at Tel Aviv and other Israeli cities .After one such statement, shrapnel from a rocket killed a 63-year-old Israeli woman south of Tel Aviv. Another rocket killed a father and his teenage daughter in a village about 20 kilometres (12 miles) from Tel Aviv. "Under international humanitarian law, or the laws of war, warring parties may only attack military objectives," Human Rights Watch said, adding, "launching such rockets to attack civilian areas is a war crime."
The group suggested the International Criminal Court, which is investigating allegations of Israeli war crimes, should include "unlawful Palestinian rocket attacks against Israel, as well as unlawful Israeli attacks in Gaza." In April, Human Rights Watch accused Israel of committing the crime of "apartheid" by seeking to maintain Jewish "domination" over Palestinians and its own Arab population, an allegation Israel firmly rejected.

Taliban Move Closer to Afghan Capital after Taking Ghazni City
Agence France Presse/August 12/2021
The Taliban seized the strategic Afghan city of Ghazni Thursday, just 150 kilometres (95 miles) from Kabul, in one of the insurgents' most important gains in a lighting offensive that has seen them seize 10 provincial capitals in a week. The interior ministry confirmed the fall of the city, which lies along the major Kabul-Kandahar highway and effectively serves as a gateway between the capital and militant strongholds in the south. "The enemy took control," spokesman Mirwais Stanikzai said in a message to media, adding fighting and resistance was still going on. The government has now effectively lost most of northern and western Afghanistan, and now holds a scattered archipelago of contested cities also dangerously at risk of falling to the Taliban. The conflict has escalated dramatically since May, when U.S.-led forces began the final stage of a troop withdrawal due to end later this month following a 20-year occupation. The loss of the Ghazni will likely pile more pressure on the country's already overstretched air force, needed to bolster Afghanistan's dispersed security forces who have increasingly been cut off from reinforcements by road. In less than a week the insurgents have seized 10 provincial capitals and have encircled the biggest city in the north, the traditional anti-Taliban bastion of Mazar-i-Sharif. Fighting was also raging in Kandahar and Lashkar Gar -- pro-Taliban heartlands in the south -- as well as Herat in the west. Late Wednesday, the Taliban said they had overrun the heavily fortified jail in Kandahar, saying "hundreds of prisoners were released and taken to safety". The Taliban frequently target prisons to release incarcerated fighters and replenish their ranks. The loss of the prison is a further ominous sign for the country's second city, which has been besieged for weeks by the Taliban. Kandahar was once the stronghold of the Taliban -- whose forces coalesced in the eponymously named province in the early 1990s -- and its capture would serve as both a tactical and psychological victory for the militants.
'Deteriorating security situation' -
Hundreds of thousands have been displaced by the fighting that has enveloped the country. In recent days, Kabul has been swamped by the displaced, who have begun camping out in parks and other public spaces, sparking a fresh humanitarian crisis in the already overtaxed capital. In Washington, defence officials appeared to be grappling with the spiraling situation but insisted that Afghan security forces were still holding their ground. "What we're seeing, a deteriorating security situation, we've been nothing but candid about that," Pentagon spokesman John Kirby told reporters Wednesday.
"But there are places and there are times, including today, where Afghan forces in the field are putting up a fight."

Algeria Wildfires Kill 42, Authorities Blame Arson
Agence France Presse/August 12/2021
Wildfires fanned by blistering temperatures and tinder-dry conditions have killed at least 42 people in Algeria, authorities said on Tuesday, adding that the fires had criminal origins. Late Tuesday the toll stood at 25 soldiers and 17 civilians killed. Photographs posted on social media show huge walls of flame and billowing clouds of smoke towering over charred trees in the forested hills of the Kabylie region, east of the capital Algiers. Algeria joins a string of countries to be hit by major blazes in recent weeks, including Greece, Turkey, Cyprus and the western United States. President Abdelmadjid Tebboune tweeted his condolences for 25 soldiers killed as they worked to rescue people in the areas of Bejaiea and Tizi Ouzou, the epicenter of the blazes. "It is with great sadness that I have learned of the martyrdom of 25 soldiers after they were successful in rescuing around 100 citizens from the flames in the mountains of Bejaiea and Tizi Ouzou," the president said. The defense ministry said the actions of the soldiers had "saved 110 people -- men, women and children -- from the flames". At least another 14 soldiers were injured to varying degrees. Seventeen civilians died in the Tizi Ouzou and Setif area, Prime Minister Aimene Benabderrahmane said late Tuesday. Earlier, the APS news agency gave a toll of 13 civilians killed. State radio said three "arsonists" had been arrested in the northern district of Medea and another in Annaba, in relation to other fires. More than 70 fires have broken out in 18 states across the north of the country, including 10 around Tizi Ouzou, one of the most populous cities in Kabylie. An AFP photographer in Tizi Ouzou saw medics carrying away bodies of people killed in the fire. Meteorologists said the temperature would hit 46 degrees Celsius (115 degrees Fahrenheit) on Tuesday in a North African country that is also struggling with severe water shortages. Interior Minister Kamel Beldjoud, on a visit to Tizi Ouzou, told television that "50 fires starting at the same time is impossible. These fires are of criminal origin."The civil protection directorate said 12 northern urban centers were hit by fires.
- Arson suspected -
Public radio reported the arrest of three suspected arsonists in Medea. Arson has been blamed for several major fires in recent years in Algeria. Last month, President Tebboune ordered a bill to stiffen punishments for starting a forest fire, with sentences of up to 30 years in prison -- and possible life imprisonment, if the fire results in death. In July, three people were arrested on suspicion of starting fires that devastated 15 square kilometers (six square miles) of forest in the Aures mountains. In 2020, nearly 440 square kilometers (170 square miles) of forest were destroyed by fire, and several people were arrested on suspicion of arson. On Monday, the U.N. released a major report showing how the threat from global warming is even more acute than previously thought. It highlighted how scientists are quantifying the extent to which human-induced warming increases the intensity and/or likelihood of a specific extreme weather event, such as a heatwave or a wildfire. Climate change amplifies droughts, creating ideal conditions for wildfires to spread out of control and inflict unprecedented material and environmental damage.


Eight Feared Dead as Russia Tourist Helicopter Crashes into Lake
Agence France Presse/August 12/2021
A helicopter carrying 16 tourists and crew on a sightseeing trip in Russia's far east crashed into a lake on Thursday, leaving eight people including a child feared dead and two others in serious condition, local officials said. The Mi-8 helicopter crash-landed into the icy waters of Kuril Lake in the mountainous Kamchatka peninsula in poor visibility and sank. Staff of the Kronotsky Nature Reserve dispatched boats to the crash site and saved eight people, two of whom are now in intensive care with various injuries. Survivors praised wildlife inspectors for coming to their rescue in a matter of minutes. "This situation is close to a miracle," said governor Vladimir Solodov. The other eight -- including the only child on board and the crew commander -- were missing and feared dead. "We don't have any information about the rest," the governor's spokeswoman, Alla Golovan, told AFP. The wreckage of the helicopter was now lying at a depth of more than 130 meters (420 feet) some 800 meters from the shore. Rescuers and divers were dispatched to the scene but they did not have the necessary equipment to begin work, authorities said. "The divers of the emergencies ministry cannot work at such depth. So we turned to the defense ministry for help," Solodov said. "Robots will be studying the bottom of Kuril Lake at the site of the crash."
Rescued from icy water
Recounting the crash and subsequent rescue operation, wildlife inspectors said that the visibility at the lake was no greater than 100 meters, adding they heard the helicopter but could not see it. When staff of the reserve heard a loud "boom", they said they dispatched two motorboats with four inspectors, who reached the scene in about three to four minutes. "Eight people were on the surface, who we immediately lifted onboard," inspector Yevgeny Denges said in a statement. The inspectors looked for other survivors but could not find anyone, Denges added. Citing the survivors, the nature reserve said that the chopper began to sink nose first and the passengers managed to swim up to the surface from a depth of eight to nine meters. "The water temperature in the lake is no more than 5-6 degrees (Celsius, 41-43 degrees Fahrenheit), it is impossible to remain in it for a long time," the reserve said.  The tourists were from Russia's second city Saint Petersburg. One of the survivors, Viktor Strelkin, said that at the time of the accident he was sleeping and woke up when a stream of water hit him in the face. "My friend's son was sitting next to me. He was fastened with a security belt and I did not have time to yank him out because I woke up too late," Strelkin said in remarks released by regional authorities.
Soviet-era chopper -
Strelkin, who practices free-diving, managed to unfasten himself, breathe in some air before the cabin filled with water, get out of the aircraft and swim up to the surface. The aircraft belongs to a firm called Vityaz-Aero, co-owned by local lawmaker Igor Redkin. Earlier this week, Redkin made headlines in Russia when he admitted to killing a man he mistook for a bear. Officials said that the helicopter had been in operation since 1984 but was in good condition. The Investigative Committee, which probes major crimes in Russia, said it was looking into a potential violation of air safety rules. Helicopter tours to the area have been suspended until Saturday. The regional prosecutor's office said it launched a probe to study "the implementation of the legislation on the provision of tourist services". Kamchatka is a vast peninsula popular with adventure tourists for its abundant wildlife, live volcanoes and black sand beaches. In July, an aircraft from a small local company crashed in the peninsula, killing 19 people when it flew into a cliff. Russia has historically had a poor reputation for air safety but has significantly improved its record since the 2000s. The country's major airlines have shifted from ageing Soviet aircraft to modern planes, but maintenance issues and lax compliance with safety rules persist.

Sudan and war crimes court inch closer to Darfur trials
AFP/August 12, 2021
ICC chief prosecutor said plans were underway for The Hague-based ICC to open an office in Sudan to collect further evidence to "build a solid case"Bashir, 77, has been wanted by the ICC for more than a decade over charges of genocide, war crimes and crimes against humanity
KHARTOUM: Sudan and the International Criminal Court signed a cooperation deal Thursday as one step further toward ex-dictator Omar Al-Bashir facing trial for genocide in the Darfur conflict. ICC chief prosecutor Karim Khan, who described the Darfur civil war as a “dark chapter” in Sudan’s history, said plans were underway for The Hague-based ICC to open an office in Sudan to collect further evidence to “build a solid case.” Bashir, 77, has been wanted by the ICC for more than a decade over charges of genocide, war crimes and crimes against humanity in the Sudanese region. Two other former aides are also wanted to face war crimes charges. The United Nations says 300,000 people were killed and 2.5 million displaced in the Darfur conflict, which erupted in the vast western region in 2003.
Sudan has been led since August 2019 by a transitional civilian-military administration, that has vowed to bring justice to victims of crimes committed under Bashir. On Thursday, Khan told reporters in Khartoum that he was “pleased to report” the transitional government had signed “a new memorandum of understanding with my office, that includes all individuals against whom warrants of arrest have been issued by the ICC.”Bashir, who ruled Sudan with an iron fist for three decades before being deposed amid popular protests in 2019, is behind bars in Khartoum’s high security Kober prison. The ICC issued an arrest warrant for Bashir in 2009 for war crimes and crimes against humanity in Darfur, later adding genocide to the charges. Bashir is jailed alongside two other former top officials facing ICC war crimes charges — ex-defense minister Abdel Rahim Mohamed Hussein and Ahmed Haroun, a former governor of South Kordofan. Earlier this week, Sudan’s cabinet agreed to hand over Bashir and other wanted officials, a decision that still needs the approval of the ruling sovereign council, comprised of military and civilian figures. But on Thursday, Khan said other key steps were needed before any possible extradition for trial. “Transfer of any suspect is an important step, but should be preceded and accompanied by substantive and ever deepening cooperation,” Khan said.
The Darfur war broke out in 2003 when non-Arab rebels took up arms complaining of systematic discrimination by Bashir’s Arab-dominated government. Khartoum responded by unleashing the notorious Janjaweed militia, recruited from among the region’s nomadic peoples. Human rights groups have long accused Bashir and his former aides of using a scorched earth policy, raping, killing, looting and burning villages. Khartoum signed a peace deal last October with key Darfuri rebel groups, with some of their leaders taking top jobs in government, although violence continues to dog the region. Bashir was convicted in December 2019 for corruption, and has been on trial in Khartoum since July 2020 for the Islamist-backed 1989 coup which brought him to power. He faces a possible death penalty if found guilty.

Trudeau to call for Canada snap elections: Media reports
AFP/12 August ,2021
Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is expected to pull the plug on his minority Liberal government and call snap elections on Sunday despite a nationwide uptick in COVID infections that is worrying voters, media reported.
Trudeau is to visit the governor general to ask her to dissolve parliament and announce voting will be held on September 20, according to public broadcaster CBC and other local media, citing unnamed sources. He and opposition leaders have been crisscrossing the country in recent weeks making election-style announcements as talk of a possible fall ballot has heated up. Trudeau was reelected to office in 2019 but lost his majority in his second term. Despite rolling out massive pandemic aid, passing a federal budget and other key legislation with opposition backing over the past year, he has lamented that parliament in recent months has become dysfunctional, with a “level of obstructionism and toxicity in the House that is of real concern.” Opposition leaders pushed back, with one urging Governor General Mary Simon to reject Trudeau’s request, informing her in a letter that his party was ready to continue propping up the minority Liberal government to pass legislation until the pandemic is declared over. “While Justin Trudeau wants to act like (the pandemic is) over ... it’s not over and people are still worried,” New Democratic Party leader Jagmeet Singh told reporters earlier, echoing public health warnings of a surge in COVID cases around the corner, despite rising vaccination rates. “If Justin Trudeau was listening to people and their concerns and their worries, he would not be holding a selfish summer election,” he said. Erin O’Toole, who has struggled to make himself known to voters since becoming head of the main opposition Tories only last year, also said this week: “We shouldn’t be rushing to an election.”If a general election were to be held now, the Liberals would be in striking distance of regaining a majority in parliament, according to the latest poll by Abacus Data, with 37 percent of support. The Conservatives and the New Democrats trail behind with 28 percent and 20 percent of support, respectively. Abacus found that 38 percent of Canadians would be happy to cast a ballot in the fall while 17 percent are firmly opposed. If COVID cases spike, however, one in five voters, including many current Liberal backers, “would be angry enough not to vote Liberal,” the polling firm said in a statement.


The Latest LCCC English analysis & editorials published on August 12-13/2021
OPEC+ should not give in to request to increase supply immediately
Cornelia Meyer/Arab News/August 12/202
Requests to OPEC from the White House are nothing new when oil supplies are tight or the oil market is broken. Presidents George H.W. Bush, Bill Clinton and George W. Bush all asked OPEC to increase production when markets were tight. Former President Donald Trump famously pushed OPEC+ to drastically reduce production when oil markets were broken and WTI turned negative at the outset of the COVID-19 pandemic. On Wednesday, US President Joe Biden asked OPEC+ to open the taps wider.
Biden’s concern are prices at the fuel pump, especially as the US “driving season” is now in full swing. People are crisscrossing the country again for the first time since the pandemic brought economic activity to a virtual standstill in April 2020.
The US government, like any other, has the interests of its country at heart and Biden, National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan, and National Economic Council Director Brian Dees are worried about inflation stemming from skyrocketing commodity prices. Dees even went as far as canvassing Federal Trade Commission Chair Lina Khan to use all available tools to counter oil price fluctuation. All of this has to be seen in the context of President Biden’s promise to the electorate that he would keep prices at the pump affordable.
In the case of Sullivan, his concern may also be a reflection of the Iran nuclear talks progressing more slowly than anticipated, which means that up to 1 million bpd will hit the market later than expected. At the same time, US shale producers are coming back more slowly than expected.
So, looking at the situation from the vantage point of the White House, one can understand the discomfort over high gasoline prices. Oil markets are arguably very tight and little respite is in sight. One can also understand the concern that rising commodity prices might stifle post-pandemic economic recovery.
OPEC+ consists of 23 sovereign nations, each of which — just like the US administration — has to put its own national interest, the balancing of its national budget, and the welfare of its people and economy first.
From the perspective of OPEC+, however, things may look different: The organization’s members incurred considerable economic losses when they cut production by 9.7 million bpd in April last year — easily the darkest month in the history of oil. No member nation has suffered more than Saudi Arabia, which, at the beginning of this year, made an additional voluntary cut of 1 million bpd in order to stabilize oil markets.
Six months on, the situation looks different: The virulent delta variant still threatens economic recovery east of Suez, however, the US and other countries with high vaccination rates are experiencing healthy economic growth. During last month’s ministerial meeting of OPEC+, the organization decided to add 400,000 bpd each month, which would restore the production of OPEC+ to pre-pandemic levels by the middle of 2022 and add 2 million bpd — or roughly 2 percent of global production — by the end of this year.
The US administration argues that this is too slow. That may be true looking at things through the American lens and given how tight markets are. However, OPEC+ has consistently taken a cautious approach to rebalancing the markets, as Saudi Energy Minister Prince Abdul Aziz bin Salman has reiterated time and again. The prince wants to understand global trends with regard to the virus before acting.
A cautious approach is definitely warranted, because there is, as yet, no clear picture of how the delta variant will impact on the global economy. Several major economies, including China, India and Japan, have a low vaccination ratio, which is a reason for concern. Goldman Sachs reduced its demand forecast for China by 1 million bpd for the next couple of months. And these Asian juggernauts are key clients for many OPEC+ nations. On top of that, OPEC+ has inbuilt checks and balances. Members have agreed to meet on a monthly basis until the end of 2022 to reevaluate the trajectory of their production strategy. So they will next be taking stock of the global economic recovery at the beginning of September.
OPEC+ consists of 23 sovereign nations, each of which — just like the US administration — has to put its own national interest, the balancing of its national budget, and the welfare of its people and economy first. All 23 nations have already done a lot of the heavy lifting in order to restore oil markets that were essentially broken 18 months ago. Compared to April 2020, the current issues are nice problems to have.
• Cornelia Meyer is a Ph.D.-level economist with 30 years of experience in investment banking and industry. She is chairperson and CEO of business consultancy Meyer Resources. Twitter: @MeyerResources

Iran must pay for attacks on commercial shipping
Dr. Majid Rafizadeh/Arab News/August 12/2021
The latest developments in the Gulf indicate that the Iranian regime is determined to pursue its hegemonic ambitions, military adventurism and destabilizing behavior in the Middle East more forcefully under the presidency of the hard-liner cleric Ebrahim Raisi. The regime will be more aggressive under its new president, who is also likely the country’s next supreme leader.
Just a few days before Raisi took office, an oil tanker, the MV Mercer Street, owned by Israeli billionaire Eyal Ofer and managed by the Zodiac Maritime company, was attacked by a drone 280 km (170 miles) from the port of Al-Daqam in the Oman Sea. The assault turned deadly as two crew members, a British and a Romanian citizen, were killed in the drone attack.
In the wake of the strike, several countries, including the UK, Romania, Liberia and Israel, sent a letter to the UN Security Council blaming the Iranian regime for the attack. The countries pointed out in the letter: “This attack disrupted and posed a risk to the safety and security of international shipping and was a clear violation of international law. This act must be condemned by the international community.”
It is important to point out that this is not the first time that the Iranian regime has been implicated in attacking commercial oil tankers in recent years. For example, four tankers were targeted close to the port of Fujairah, off the coast of the UAE in May 2019. A month later, on June 13, 2019, two tankers crossing the Gulf of Oman were also sabotaged with explosives — one went up in flames and both were left adrift.
The two ships that were sabotaged were Japanese and Norwegian: The Japanese Kokuka Courageous and the Norwegian Front Altair. A few weeks later, the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps became more emboldened and broadcast a video boasting how its commandos, wearing black ski masks and military fatigues, descended from a helicopter on to a British oil tanker in the Strait of Hormuz and seized the ship.
Intriguingly, the Iranian leaders have previously claimed responsibility for some of the attacks on commercial oil tankers. Iran’s Guardian Council spokesman Abbas Ali Kadkhodaei told the semi-official Fars news agency that the seizure of the British tanker in 2019 was in retaliation for the British navy seizing an Iranian tanker off Gibraltar. He stated that it was aimed at confronting “the illegitimate economic war, and seizure of oil tankers is an instance of this rule and is based on international rights.” But he failed to mention that Tehran’s oil tanker was shipping oil to Syria in violation of EU sanctions.
Orders to target commercial oil tankers and destabilize the Gulf most likely come from Iran’s Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei because he has the final say in Iran’s domestic and foreign policies.
By attacking commercial oil tankers, the Iranian leaders are breaching two crucial international laws. First, Iran’s aggressive behavior and assaults are a blatant violation of the UN General Assembly’s Definition of Aggression, which “calls on all states to refrain from all acts of aggression and other uses of force contrary to the Charter of the United Nations and the Declaration on Principles of International Law concerning Friendly Relations and Cooperation among states in accordance with the Charter of the United Nations.”
This resolution clarifies that the following can be classed as acts of aggression: “The blockade of the ports or coasts of a state by the armed forces of another state,” and “an attack by the armed forces of a state on the land, sea or air forces, or marine and air fleets of another state.”
Second, the regime is violating the internationally recognized UN Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS). Under part three of UNCLOS, “Straits Used For International Navigation,” Article 44, the agreement stipulates that: “States bordering straits shall not hamper transit passage and shall give appropriate publicity to any danger to navigation or over flight within or over the strait of which they have knowledge. There shall be no suspension of transit passage.”
UNCLOS also clarifies that transit passage means the “freedom of navigation and overflight solely for the purpose of continuous and expeditious transit of the strait between one part of the high seas or an exclusive economic zone and another part of the high seas or an exclusive economic zone.”
This highlights the fact that Iran is blatantly violating this customary international law on the freedom of navigation. It is worth noting that the theocratic establishment of Iran is a signatory to UNCLOS but has long refrained from ratifying it.
Orders to target commercial oil tankers and destabilize the Gulf most likely come from Iran’s Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei because he has the final say in Iran’s domestic and foreign policies.
The international community must hold the Iranian regime accountable for violating international maritime laws as it blatantly attacks commercial oil tankers.
• Dr. Majid Rafizadeh is a Harvard-educated Iranian-American political scientist. Twitter: @Dr_Rafizadeh

Afghanistan at the crossroads as civil war looms

Andrew Hammond/Arab News/August 12/2021
Alarm is growing at the prospect of the Taliban unseating the Kabul government, but that outcome is just one of three scenarios for Afghanistan’s future amid mounting military uncertainty and an unfolding human tragedy.
There is no question that momentum is with the Taliban, which have taken more territory in Afghanistan in the past two months than they did in the past 20 years. The insurgents now are estimated to control two-thirds of the country as foreign forces pull out after a lengthy engagement that was one of the costliest and most ambitious foreign operations ever, with over $800 billion spent by Washington alone — more than the cost of the Marshall Plan that helped rebuild Europe after the Second World War.
Yet, even as the Taliban seek to deliver a “knockout blow” to President Ashraf Ghani’s government, protracted civil war is still the scenario that many seasoned pundits, including former US commander David Petraeus and former UK spy chief Alex Younger, see as most likely. Part of the reason is the remaining balance of security personnel in the nation.
On Tuesday, the White House reasserted that Afghan national defense forces have the equipment, numbers and training to fight back and that they will be supported by limited US air strikes. In addition, Ghani is also doubling down on calls for regional militias to defend Afghanistan’s “democratic fabric.” Many of these so-called warlords, forged in the mujahideen battles of the 1990s with the Soviet Union, have been at loggerheads with Kabul for years and the fact that the president is now appealing to them so forcefully underlines the dire straits he is now in.
So much so, in fact, that an increasing number of foreign politicians are now openly speculating about the implications of a new Taliban government. Even US Secretary of State Antony Blinken said on Tuesday that Afghanistan would become a “pariah state” if the Taliban take control by force.
The Taliban strategy to deliver a military knockout blow to the Afghan government now appears to be to take the north of the country.
Other governments, including China, are also increasingly engaging with the Taliban leadership. The latter assured Beijing recently that a Taliban-led Afghanistan will not become a base for plotting against another country amid Chinese fears of a staging ground for Uighur separatists in Xinjiang.
The Taliban strategy to deliver a military knockout blow to Ghani’s government now appears to be to take the north of the country, as well as the main border crossings in the north, west and south, and then close in on Kabul. Puli-Khumri, capital of the northern province of Baghlan, fell to the insurgents on Tuesday, the seventh regional capital to come under the control of the Taliban in about a week.
The insurgents’ advances mean it may be weeks until it is clearer whether civil war or insurgent victory comes to pass, but one thing is certain already. Amid the current Afghan mayhem, the country’s fragile progress over the past two decades has gone into reverse, with a daunting array of economic, security and political challenges.
So much so, in fact, that a third scenario of political compromise between Ghani’s government and the Taliban is now only a dwindling possibility — in the absence of more foreign forces to help bring it about. Last year’s reconciliation talks between Kabul and the insurgents had raised hopes of a breakthrough involving withdrawal of foreign forces and prisoner releases in exchange for security guarantees by the militants.
Yet, while the Biden administration highlighted again on Tuesday the importance of further negotiations, the elusive goal of a sustained peace seems further away than ever given the recent Taliban battlefield advances. As long as the insurgent forces are on the offensive, there is little incentive for compromise.
The bleakness of the security and political situation is underlined by the fact that India this week became the latest country to advise its citizens to leave Afghanistan. Other nations, including the US and UK, have already issued warnings to this effect.
On the economic front, the news is not good either. Reconstruction has been slow and unemployment remains very high. Ghulam Bahauddin Jailani, head of the national disaster authority, warned this week of a mounting human tragedy, with 60,000 families displaced in the past two months alone, most seeking refuge in Kabul or foreign countries.
It is also clear that, since the fall of the Taliban regime in 2001, the economy has been insufficiently diversified from drug exports, such as opium and heroin, despite the fact that the country has abundant natural resources — gas, minerals and oil — with an estimated value of about $3 trillion. A related problem is corruption, with Transparency International ranking Afghanistan as one of the most corrupt states in the world.
With the growing prospect of intensified instability, the country is set to go backward, possibly rapidly. This will taint the legacy of post-9/11 foreign intervention in Afghanistan further as, tragically, the fragile gains of the past two decades continue to unravel.
• Andrew Hammond is an Associate at LSE IDEAS at the London School of Economics.

The rich world’s super-spreader shame
Ngaire Woods and Anna Petherick/Arab News/August 12/2021
G20 leaders will meet in Rome at the end of October, in part to discuss how to deal with future pandemics. But the truth is that their countries’ actions have largely fueled the current crisis.
Many G20 countries have been coronavirus disease (COVID-19) super-spreaders. Following the coronavirus’ transmission beyond China, which initially sought to quash reporting of the outbreak, the US and other rich countries chalked up early failures that greatly contributed to the virus’ worldwide spread. Had these countries acted sooner, they could have at least slowed the transmission to poorer countries. Worse still, their failure to commit to vaccinating the whole world as quickly as possible has created a self-defeating cycle where more transmissible and harmful variants of the virus are likely to be unleashed.
Statistical models show that international air travel was the key factor in the global spread of COVID-19 until early March last year. This is borne out by studies that detail the spread of the alpha variant (also known as the UK or Kent variant) and the frequency of air travel to different countries from London airports in October 2020. Prominent in the alpha variant’s spread were Spain, Italy and Germany.
Data from earlier in the pandemic enable us to see how different viral strains emerged over time. If we put this information alongside data from the Oxford COVID-19 Government Response Tracker (OxCGRT) regarding government policies, we can pin down details of disease spread. Among G20 countries, the failures of the US and the UK stand out.
New York was one of the early super-spreader cities. It recorded its first confirmed COVID-19 case on Feb. 29, 2020, about a month after the US restricted travel from parts of China. But even though COVID-19 was raging in Italy, the US introduced restrictions on people arriving from mainland Europe only on March 13, two days after the World Health Organization declared a pandemic; and not until March 16 did it extend these to arrivals from the UK and Ireland.
The viral sequence data demonstrate that the virus did not move directly from China to New York. Instead, US hesitancy to clamp down on travel from Europe was largely responsible for multiple introductions of the virus, which seeded the city’s huge death toll.
Moreover, interstate travel within the US largely continued during lockdowns. OxCGRT data show that 17 US states have never stopped it since the pandemic hit. The similar mix of viral lineages from early in the pandemic across the US indicates that reintroductions of the virus were common even in places that had eliminated an original strain. Research combining air-travel data and genomics has concluded that the spread of COVID-19 within the US resulted more from domestic introductions than international air travel.
G20 countries must make up for their COVID-19 failure and commit to vaccinating those at most risk across the world. And as super-connected countries, they must also establish new international standards for pathogen surveillance and travel protocols to ensure that they never super-spread again
Ngaire Woods and Anna Petherick
The UK was another super-spreader with an achingly slow pandemic response, given where and when genomics now tells us the virus was circulating. In that regard, the COVID-19 Genomics UK Consortium (COG-UK), the largest of its kind in the world, has sequenced more than 26,000 viral isolates from people who caught COVID-19 in the UK’s first wave, and compared these sequences with those from other countries.
Two main conclusions emerge. First, Europe was the source of initial infections in the UK. Up until late June 2020, 80 percent of imported viruses arrived in the month-long period from Feb. 27 to March 30, and these were overwhelmingly from Europe. One-third came from Spain, 29 percent from France, and 12 percent from Italy — and a mere 0.4 percent from China.
Second, inbound travel fueled the arrival of many new genetic lineages in the UK, with the rate of these appearances among the infected population peaking in late March 2020. When the UK finally brought in nonpharmaceutical interventions (NPIs) en masse — causing the country’s score on the OxCGRT Stringency Index to rise from 17 out of 100 to almost 80 in just one week — the diversity of viral isolates began to decline. In other words, the NPIs succeeded in extinguishing many of these lineages in the UK.
These failures cast doubt on G20 countries’ pandemic management more broadly. Had the world’s large, advanced economies stopped new arrivals earlier (especially travelers from Europe), and had they limited internal travel, they would have reduced their own COVID-19 devastation.
Restricting the export of infections would have slowed or perhaps even largely prevented the disease’s spread to poorer countries until vaccines were developed. That, in turn, might have averted costly lockdowns in places that could ill afford them. G20 governments have focused on preventing the import of the virus, not its export. With hindsight, the virus would have been contained had they required repeat negative tests for anyone getting on a plane or emerging from a quarantine facility.
Having accelerated the spread of COVID-19, richer countries are now prevaricating about getting vaccines to those who need them most. Wealthy countries have stockpiled doses, prioritized vaccinating children who are at relatively low risk from COVID-19, and are even preparing third “booster shots” for which there is no evidence yet of widespread, near-term need.
Meanwhile, COVID-19 is ravaging developing countries, where front-line health workers are dying because they have no access to vaccines. The pandemic has already killed more people globally in 2021 than it did in 2020. Many experts harbor grave concerns about the further spread of the delta variant, as well as other variants to come, especially in regions where vaccination is progressing slowly.
G20 countries must make up for their COVID-19 failure and commit to vaccinating those at most risk across the world. And as super-connected countries, they must also establish new international standards for pathogen surveillance and travel protocols to ensure that they never super-spread again.
• Ngaire Woods is dean of the Blavatnik School of Government at the University of Oxford.
• Anna Petherick is a departmental lecturer in public policy at the Blavatnik School of Government at the University of Oxford.
Copyright: Project Syndicate

Erdogan’s Turkey is a key patron of global efforts to delegitimize Israel
David May/Aykan Erdemir/ Washington Examiner/August 12/2021
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has been offering in recent months to mend relations and exchange ambassadors with Israel. Meanwhile, his government was busy helping convicted terrorist conspirator Sami al Arian organize an Istanbul symposium dedicated to delegitimizing the Jewish state. For as long as Erdogan remains a leading patron of violent antisemitism, he should not expect his calls for a rapprochement to convince his counterparts in Jerusalem.
The conference in question, “Challenging Apartheid in Palestine, Reclaiming the Narrative, Formulating a Vision,” took place at the Center for Islam and Global Affairs at Istanbul Sabahattin Zaim University between June 18 and June 23. The Turkish Ministry of Culture and Tourism co-sponsored the event. Additionally, Erdogan’s son Bilal, who is the chairman of the board of trustees of the Islamist-rooted foundation that established IZU, spoke at the conference.
The United States sentenced al Arian in 2006 to 57 months in prison and deported him to Turkey in 2015 for conspiring to aid Palestinian Islamic Jihad, which Washington designated as a terrorist group in 1995. Al Arian helped found an organization in 1988 that the FBI would shut down in 1995 for serving as a front of the PIJ. In the early 1990s, al Arian helped a PIJ cofounder obtain a U.S. visa and founded a think tank led by Ramadan Abdullah Shallah, a colleague of al Arian at the University of South Florida who would leave the post in 1995 to become the PIJ’s secretary-general. Al Arian became the CIGA’s director in 2017.
Al Arian set the conference’s tone when he challenged the existence of the Jewish state, declaring, “This is a global struggle, and it has to focus on the task of dismantling a racist, settler-colonialist regime in Palestine.”
Other conference speakers embraced similar views. Mohammad Akram al Adlouni, for example, has strong ties to Hamas, a U.S.-designated terrorist group. Al Adlouni is a member of Hamas’s overseas consultative body, according to an article published on Hamas’s website in June 2021. The think tank al Adlouni heads has provided a platform for numerous Hamas officials, including former Hamas political leader Ismail Haniyeh, foreign relations chief Osama Hamdan, and Palestinian Authority parliament member Ahmad Atoun. In 2012, the U.S. Department of the Treasury sanctioned the charity that al Adlouni ran from at least 2005 to 2010 “for being controlled by and acting for or on behalf of Hamas.”
Shawan Jabarin, another conference speaker and the head of the Palestinian lawfare organization al Haq, is a senior member of the terrorist group known as the Palestinian Front for the Liberation of Palestine, according to Israeli court documents. An Israeli Supreme Court justice described Jabarin as a “Doctor Jekyll and Mister Hyde,” heading a nongovernmental organization while also belonging to a terrorist group.
Osama Abu Irshaid, the executive director of American Muslims for Palestine, also spoke at the conference. According to 2016 congressional testimony delivered by Jonathan Schanzer, a senior vice president of the Foundation for Defense of Democracies, numerous AMP staff and board members previously staffed or were affiliated with the Holy Land Foundation, the Islamic Association for Palestine, and KindHearts, three organizations the U.S. shut down for helping finance Hamas. Abu Irshaid himself was the editor of al Zaytouna, a journal published by the IAP, and served on the board of the American Muslim Society, an alleged pseudonym for the IAP. Abu Irshaid’s ties to the Turkish government extend to its top leader. Erdogan met with Irshaid on Aug. 24, 2020, in 2014, and several other times.
The confluence of Erdogan’s virulent antisemitism, condemned in May by the State Department and the House Bipartisan Task Force for Combating Antisemitism, with the terrorism of Hamas and PIJ leads to a toxic mix. Turkey, which was once a key security partner for Israel, started providing Hamas with a convenient base for operations following Erdogan’s rise to power.
The Turkish president, in fact, publicly endorsed Hamas in 2018 as “not a terrorist organization” but “a resistance movement.” The State Department chided Turkey in August 2020 for receiving a Hamas delegation that included Ismail Haniyeh and Saleh Arouri, who ordered the kidnapping and killing of three Israeli teenagers in 2014. When the delegation arrived, an Israeli official claimed that Turkey had supplied a dozen Hamas members with passports. Washington has sanctioned both Haniyeh and Arouri.
Additionally, Israel warned in February 2021 that Ankara has allowed Palestinians to use Turkish soil to plot terrorist attacks against Israel on several occasions. In 2016, then-Israeli Defense Minister Moshe Ya’alon went so far as to accuse Turkey of “hosting in Istanbul the terror command post of Hamas abroad.”
The recent conference raises major concerns about Turkey’s role in sheltering terrorists and in promoting boycotts against Israel. If the Erdogan government ever wants to thaw Turkey’s relations with Israel, it must stop supporting groups committed to destroying the Jewish state.
*David May (@DavidSamuelMay) is a senior research analyst at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies (@FDD), where
*Aykan Erdemir (@aykan_erdemir) is the senior director of the Turkey Program. Aykan is a former member of the Turkish parliament. FDD is a Washington, DC-based, nonpartisan research institute focusing on national security and foreign policy.

German Appeasement Of Khamenei Endangers Iranians And The World
Benjamin Weinthal/Ellie Cohanim/Iran International/August 12/2021
Back in 2008, the Wall Street Journal ran an editorial titled “Germany Loves Iran” and a piece headlined “Berlin ♥ Iran III” that covered workshops designed to help companies boost trade with the Islamic Republic.
The editorials explained why the “Islamic Republic is so much in vogue” in Germany.
Fast-forward 13 years and one sees that the German government’s infatuation with the clerical regime in Tehran has only gotten worse, and this at the expense of German citizens and repressed Iranians.
Chancellor Angela Merkel’s administration remains disturbingly unconcerned about the Iranian government’s kidnapping of German citizen Jamshid Sharmahd because he opposes the Islamic Republic. He has been held largely incommunicado since his abduction a little over a year ago during a visit to the United Arab Emirates.
Jamshid’s daughter Gazelle appealed on Twitter to the German foreign ministry and to Roger Carstens, the special presidential envoy for hostage affairs at the U.S. State Department, to not turn “a blind eye anymore” to her father’s situation, whose health is worsening due to Parkinson’s disease. Mr. Sharmahd is a legal resident of California.
When we submitted questions to Michaela Engelmeier, a former member of the Bundestag for the German Social Democratic Party, about her SPD party’s largely pro-Iranian regime policies, she refused to answer and blocked one of us on Twitter.
Gazelle wrote about Engelmeier: “Wondering if these people think they can also easily block the consequences of supporting policies that allow crimes against humanity such as terror, torture, kidnapping or execution in real life?”
The Social Democratic Party controls the foreign ministry and its chief diplomat, Heiko Maas, has sent high level representatives to Tehran’s embassy over the years to celebrate the 1979 Islamic Revolution.
To make matters worse, the Social Democratic president of Germany, Frank-Walter Steinmeier, sent a congratulatory telegram to then-Iranian President Hassan Rouhani in 2019 “in the name” of the German people, on the occasion of the 40th anniversary of the radical Islamic Revolution. Merkel did not object to her coalition partner’s celebration of Iran’s revolution or to Steinmeier’s congratulatory telegram.
Last week, Iran’s opaque judiciary sentenced the German-Iranian human rights activist Nahid Taghavi to 10 years and eight months in prison.
Mariam Claren tweeted that her mother “did not commit any crime. Unless freedom of speech, freedom of thought are illegal.”
Claren retweeted a message from lawyer Mostafa Nili saying that a Revolutionary Court sentenced Taghavi and a British-Iranian man, Mehran Raouf, for allegedly running an “illegal group” and spreading “propaganda against the system.”
Germany’s foreign ministry said its access to Taghavi was largely restricted.
If Berlin seeks to secure the release of the two innocent Germans, it could start to flex its economic muscles and begin to slash trade with Iran’s regime. Over the decades, Germany has remained the regime’s most important European trade partner.
Merkel’s administration has gone as far as to fail to object to “dual-use” military and civilian technology being sold to Iranian businessmen. As a result, a German company sold technology that was incorporated in Iranian-produced rockets used in chemical attacks in Syria that poisoned dozens of civilians, including children, in 2018. The company logo of the Krempel firm and the “Made in Germany” product signature were found at the chemical attack sites, the German paper Bild reported at the time.
The German government’s Federal Office for Economic Affairs and Export Control (BAFA) had green-lighted a deal for Krempel, located near Stuttgart, in the southern German state of Baden-Württemberg, to sell the military-applicable technology to two firms in Tehran, the paper noted.
As one of the European Union’s biggest exporters to Iran, Germany has powerful leverage over the Islamic Republic’s wobbly economy. But Berlin refuses to use its economic might to secure the freedom of German nationals because it prioritizes commerce over human rights.
Other glaring examples of Germany’s romance with Iran’s regime can be seen in the Baden-Württemberg city of Freiburg and the northern city-state of Hamburg.
Freiburg has a twin-city partnership with the clerical regime-controlled Isfahan.
Dr. Kazem Moussavi, a prominent Iranian dissident in Germany, recently took a controversial state employee, Michael Blume, who is responsible for the fight against antisemitism in Baden-Württemberg, to task for viewing Freiburg’s relationship with Isfahan as a “normal thing.”
Moussavi said, “Mr. Blume should call on those in Freiburg responsible to end the city partnership with Isfahan.”
Blume, who was accused last month of spreading antisemitism on social media by the Los Angeles-based human rights organization the Simon Wiesenthal Center, refused to respond to our queries about Moussavi’s statement.
The Iranian regime engages in what one of has termed an “obsessive antisemitism” with their Holocaust denial as state policy, genocidal desire to “eliminate Israel” and proxy activity via terror groups Hamas, Hezbollah and Palestinian Islamic Jihad–all targeting the Jewish state.
Moussavi has gone to great lengths over the years to expose the regime’s crimes against humanity and lethal antisemitism despite the fact that according to German state intelligence agencies, Iran runs an extensive espionage network in the Federal Republic. Thus, Moussavi is risking his life to expose the indifference in Germany to Iranian regime-sponsored terrorism and antisemitism.
Moussavi said the city partnership represents a “danger not only for the German state of Baden-Württemberg, but also for the security and democracy of Germany.”
The mayor of Freiburg, Martin Horn, refuses to pull the plug on the city partnership. Baden-Württemberg’s governor, Winfried Kretschmann, and interior minister, Thomas Strobl, remain indifferent to the highly dangerous and antisemitic partnership.
Baden-Württemberg has an unsavory history of electing leaders who tolerate antisemitism. After the Second World War, the former Nazi navy judge Hans Filbinger, who executed German military defectors, was elected governor in the 1960s and 1970s. Moussavi noted that the regime in Isfahan represses its tiny Jewish population.
“The mullahs are using this city partnership for the goals of spreading their ideology and antisemitism,” Moussavi said. In contrast to Blume, Stefan Hensel, the new antisemitism commissioner for the city-state of Hamburg, urged in June that the city authorities shut down Ali Khamenei-controlled Islamic Center of Hamburg. In January 2020, supporters used the Center to mourn death of mass murderer Qasem Soleimani, the former commander of the Iranian Revolutionary Guards’ Quds Force.
The Green party and Social Democratic coalition government oppose the closure of Khamenei’s base in Hamburg.
Sadly, Germany continues to coddle and pamper the world’s top-state sponsor of international terrorism, the Islamic Republic, according to both Democratic and Republican US administrations. Germany needs to stop prioritizing trade deals with the Islamic Republic over the human rights of its citizens and the dire plight of Iranians.
*Benjamin Weinthal is a fellow at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies. Follow Benjamin on Twitter @BenWeinthal. Ellie Cohanim served as U.S. Deputy Special Envoy to Combat Anti-Semitism and was the State Department’s first Iranian-born Envoy. Ellie is a senior fellow at the Center for Security Policy. Follow her on Twitter @EllieCohanim. FDD is a Washington, DC-based, nonpartisan research institute focusing on national security and foreign policy.

Analysis: Somaliland’s lingering jihadi threat
Caleb Weiss/DD's Long War Journal/August 12/2021
Editor’s note: Caleb Weiss recently visited Hargeisa.
On May 18, 2021, Somaliland celebrated its 30th independence anniversary after unilaterally breaking away from Somalia in 1991. Compared to its neighbors across the Horn of Africa, and indeed much of East Africa, Somaliland represents a relatively stable territory with very little terrorism inside its borders.
Despite a wave of suicide bombers that hit Somaliland’s capital of Hargeisa in Oct. 2008 – bombings widely blamed on Shabaab, al Qaeda’s branch in East Africa – the unrecognized country has not witnessed another major terrorist attack since then.
Security forces have arrested various Shabaab members and sympathizers during the past decade, while also reportedly disrupting terror plots. This indicates that Somaliland probably faces an ongoing, low-level jihadist threat. The threat mainly emanates from Shabaab, though a small Islamic State arm based in the neighboring Puntland region of Somalia provides another worry for the state.
Al Qaeda’s History inside Somaliland
Jihadist activity has long been reported inside Somaliland. For instance, in October 2003 Italian aid worker Annalena Tonelli was murdered by gunmen belonging to the al Qaeda-linked Al Itihad al Islamiyya (AIAI) in the Somaliland city of Borama. Just days later, AIAI also murdered two British aid workers in the town of Sheikh. And in March 2004, the same AIAI cell shot Kenyan aid worker, Flora Chepkemoi, to death in Hargeisa. Somali officials have stated that the Somaliland AIAI cell was commanded by Aden Hashi Ayro, a key operative within Al Qaeda’s East African networks and co-founder of Shabaab.
Founded by Somali jihadists who had fought and trained inside Afghanistan, AIAI was sanctioned by the US government and the United Nations for its close links to al Qaeda in September and October 2001, respectively.
AIAI eventually formed a core part of the Islamic Courts Union (ICU) in 2006, which controlled Mogadishu and much of southern Somalia until several successive African Union military offensives drove them out of the capital city. Al Qaeda’s current branch inside Somalia, Shabaab, grew out of the ICU.
Somaliland and international officials say Shabaab carried out the Oct. 2008 suicide barrage in Somaliland and Puntland, which killed at least 30 people in Hargeisa and Bosaso. While the group never officially claimed the assaults, it did praise and acknowledge the suicide bombers in its media.
The subsequent investigation of the bombing campaign found that just one of the bombers was a native Somalilander. However, this does not mean that members of Shabaab from Somaliland have not played a large role in the organization.
Indeed, Ahmed Abdi Godane, also known as Mukhtar Abu Zubeyr, Shabaab’s first emir until his death in September 2014, was born and raised in Hargeisa. Before migrating to southern Somalia, Somaliland officials also linked Godane to the AIAI cell that murdered the foreign aid workers in 2003 and 2004.
Current jihadi operations
Although the jihadists have not conducted a major attack since 2008, Somaliland still faces a plethora of other threats from terrorist groups in the region. For instance, both Shabaab and its rival in the Islamic State’s Somalia Province (or just Islamic State Somalia, ISS), have their northern bases in the mountains of Puntland that straddle the Somaliland border.
Shabaab, for instance, has often utilized these bases to infiltrate Somaliland territory in its far eastern reaches. In Oct. 2020, the group captured several villages near the town of Las Qoray in Somaliland’s Sanaag Region. And just a year prior, Shabaab said it took control over a village not far from Ceerigabo, also in the Sanaag Region.
Much of Somaliland’s east, however, is not under firm government control. Large areas of Sanaag and Sool, another region in Somaliland, are disputed with Puntland. Moreover, the dominant clans of Somaliland’s east, the Darod sub-clans of the Warsangali and Dhulbahante, have often been at odds with Somaliland’s government over claims of discrimination and under-representation among the region’s dominant Isaaq clan. The Dhulbahante themselves have had a rival claimant to power in the Khatumo State of eastern Somaliland.
These conflicts and grievances have the potential to be exploited by Shabaab. For instance, in 2010, a series of bombings in and near the city of Las Anod in Somaliland’s Sool Region are thought to have been perpetrated by Shabaab-sympathetic members of the Dhulbahante.
In Somaliland’s major cities such as Hargeisa, Burco, and Berbera, Shabaab is also thought to maintain sleeper cells. Somaliland officials told FDD’s Long War Journal that Shabaab also attempts to maintain an active intelligence apparatus in the urban areas. However, Shabaab has been less effective at utilizing these networks for kinetic operations.
Somaliland officials and independent researchers often tout the efficacy of the country’s intelligence services and their relationships with local communities at thwarting Shabaab’s attempts at infiltrating cities within the territory. Somaliland officials also quoted similar recent successes in this regard to this author during a recent trip to Hargeisa. However, the reliance on community networks and local reporting is likely just part of the story.
The vast majority of Shabaab’s focus and resources are directed to the war in central and southern Somalia. Shabaab’s failure to launch major attacks inside Somaliland may also be the result of the group’s smaller presence in Somalia’s northern Puntland region.
Shabaab is also likely pursuing a different modus operandi in the north, in which it is focused on establishing greater ties with local clans to build support and provide opportunities for expansion.
For example, one way in which it better expanded its presence in neighboring Puntland was by establishing ties with the Warsangali clan militia led by Mohamad Said Atom. In 2010, Atom pledged allegiance to Shabaab, effectively making his clan’s militiamen Shabaab’s foot soldiers in the mountains of Puntland. Shabaab has been able to expand in the north in recent years, even after Atom’s defection in 2014, as a result. For instance, Atom’s successor, Yasin Kilwe, is himself a member of the Warsangali clan. There is evidence that Shabaab is trying to pursue the same route inside Somaliland. For instance, in the two occasions it has taken over territory inside Somaliland, it has made a point to lecture and preach to the locals, indicating it is taking a Da’wah-first approach, that is, proselytising for Shabaab’s jihadist version of Islam.
It remains unclear how successful Shabaab will be in this endeavor, however, as local media reported after the Nov. 2019 capture of a town near Ceerigabo that local clans organized a militia against Shabaab.
Turning briefly to the Islamic State in Somalia, the group retains small cells in southern Somalia and in various areas of Puntland. Its leadership is based in the Galgala Mountains that run the border between Somaliland and Puntland.
However, ISS has not launched one attack inside Somaliland’s territory. Instead, its resources are largely invested in Puntland’s Bosaso, Qandala, and Iskushuban districts. In regard to its operations, it has also claimed the vast majority of its attacks inside Mogadishu or its northern suburb Afgooye, according to data kept by FDD’s Long War Journal. That said, as the United Nations documents the reportedly outsized role played by ISS in the Islamic State’s overall African network, the government in Hargeisa remains rightly concerned over any future possibilities for the Islamic State to strike within its territory.
Conclusion
Somaliland sits at an interesting time in its overall history. While still unrecognized, it has nevertheless paved business and diplomatic relationships with countries like the UAE and Turkey in order to gain more international legitimacy. In these endeavours, Somaliland touts its relative safety and lack of terrorism as a selling point for future relations.
As it stands, Somaliland’s security apparatus has indeed been able to keep the territory from witnessing another major terrorist attack since 2008. However, it is not entirely out of the woods yet.
In the east where its control is lacking, Shabaab is indeed trying to make in-roads with local clans that claim discrimination from the government in Hargeisa. And if Ethiopia is correct in its claims that both Shabaab and the Islamic State utilize Somaliland as a transit route for points throughout East Africa, Hargeisa faces even more of an intelligence challenge against the jihadist groups.
Time will tell just how long Somaliland will be able to keep the jihadist groups at bay. For now, at least, the territory remains among the most secure places in both Africa’s Horn and the wider East African region.
*Caleb Weiss is a contributor to FDD's Long War Journal.

ريبيكا آنا أبروكتور/ رب نيوز : بعد عام على توقيها كيف أثرت اتفاقيات إبراهيم على العلاقات العربية الإسرائيلية بعد عام
How the Abraham Accords have influenced Arab-Israeli relations, one year on
Rebecca Anna Aproctor/Arab News/August 12, 2021
http://eliasbejjaninews.com/archives/101340/%d8%b1%d9%8a%d8%a8%d9%8a%d9%83%d8%a7-%d8%a2%d9%86%d8%a7-%d8%a3%d8%a8%d8%b1%d9%88%d9%83%d8%aa%d9%88%d8%b1-%d8%a8%d8%b9%d8%af-%d8%b9%d8%a7%d9%85-%d8%b9%d9%84%d9%89-%d8%aa%d9%88%d9%82%d9%8a%d9%87%d8%a7/
Years of quiet diplomacy laid the foundation for the establishment of formal ties between Israel and the UAE
Proponents of the pact laud its economic benefits, while skeptics rue lack of progress on Palestinian statehood
DUBAI: One year ago, the UAE became the first Arab country to sign the Abraham Accords, a series of US-brokered diplomatic agreements inked between Israel and Arab states.
The Aug. 13 signing marked the first time an Arab country had publicly established relations with Israel since Egypt in 1979, and then Jordan in 1994. Bahrain followed suit on Sept. 11 last year.
The rapprochement between the UAE and Israel was remarkable in many ways given their long history of animosity over the rights of the Palestinian people.
Those in favor of the deal have lauded the prospects for trade and commerce, which economists predict could be worth $6.5 billion annually.
Dorian Barak, co-founder of the UAE-Israel Business Council, told Arab News: “We’re on track to reach $3 billion in annual trade by 2025, with some estimating even more. “Some of this is bilateral, but much more of it is Israel trading with and through the UAE as a gateway to other markets in the region, from the large economies in the Arab world to India, South Asia, and beyond.”
Others are skeptical that the pact will promote peace in the region or encourage a resolution to the decades-old Arab-Israeli conflict.
Dr. Abdulkhaleq Abdulla, an Emirati political analyst, told Arab News: “After one year, we are seeing that this accord has two legs. There is a strong leg and a weaker one.
“The first and strongest is the pragmatist or realist leg — and this is the one that is here to stay. This is the leg that is beneficial to both (the UAE and Israel) and has to do with all economic, technological, and strategic benefits that come with the accords.
“The second and weaker leg is the idealistic one — the one that has promised peace and stability to the region and prosperity to the Palestinians. This leg is not proving as strong as the national interests that bind the UAE and Israel together,” he said.
On Sept. 15, 2020, the UAE, Bahrain and Israel agreed the Abraham Accords Declaration, stating their recognition of “the importance of maintaining and strengthening peace in the Middle East and around the world based on mutual understanding and coexistence, as well as respect for human dignity and freedom, including religious freedom.”
It was signed at the White House in Washington, D.C. by the UAE’s Foreign Minister Abdullah bin Zayed Al-Nahyan, his Bahraini counterpart Abdullatif bin Rashid Al-Zayani, then-Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, and then-US President Donald Trump.
When the COVID-19 pandemic travel restrictions began to be relaxed in autumn of last year, the first direct commercial flights took off between Tel Aviv and Dubai, with thousands of tourist and business travelers setting foot on one another’s soil for the first time. Dubai witnessed changes almost overnight. Suddenly, Hebrew could be heard in public places, yarmulke-wearing men became a common sight, and Jews based in the emirate began worshipping openly. Kosher food started to appear on menus at major hotels and on commercial flights to cater to the growing Jewish clientele.
In order to maintain the momentum of interfaith understanding, plans were soon underway for the Abrahamic Family House in Abu Dhabi.
Scheduled to open in 2022 and designed by award-winning Ghanaian architect Sir David Adjaye, the structure will host a church, synagogue, and mosque to celebrate the fraternity of the three monotheistic faiths.
The apparent success of the Abraham Accords quickly inspired other nations to join. In October, Sudan became the third Arab country to sign up to the agreements, followed in December by Morocco.
Recently, in reply to a question on whether Saudi Arabia was thinking of coming on board, Foreign Minister Prince Faisal bin Farhan praised the agreements but said that a Palestinian settlement would result in complete normalization for Israel across the region. “Overall, the Abraham Accords have had a positive effect on relations in the region and we must build on that by finding a solution for the Palestinians,” he told the Aspen Security Forum.
The hope among the agreements’ supporters, particularly Jewish communities throughout the Arab world, is that it will promote further dialogue.
Yehuda Sarna, the UAE’s chief rabbi, told Arab News: “My prediction one year ago was that the opening up of diplomatic relations would break down stereotypes between Arabs and Jews, pressing the reset button to the relationship between civilizations.
“That is exactly what has occurred; hundreds of thousands of people have encountered each other in person, mostly in the UAE, and millions more have engaged online, in positive and inspiring ways.”
Sarna, who also serves as the executive director for Jewish Student Life at New York University, said the Jewish community in the UAE was, “in the process of building the civil society infrastructure to support these interactions, including researching how best to bring people together, developing local religious and educational institutions, as well as organizations for cultural exchange.”
To mark the one-year anniversary of the agreement, Sarna has written “a prayer for the region as a whole,” which will be distributed to more than 1,000 synagogues worldwide, including those associated with the Rabbinical Council of America.
Although the agreements have shown potential for prosperity in the region, critics have pointed out they have so far done little to promote peace between the Israelis and the Palestinians or brought the Palestinians any closer to statehood.
The strength of the Abraham Accords was tested at the end of May this year when Israel and the Palestinian militant group Hamas, which controls the Gaza Strip, fought an 11-day war.
Abdulla, the Emirati political analyst, said: “As we have seen in Gaza, and have seen all along, the accords will not bring peace and prosperity to the region as promised.” And he noted that they would not guarantee the legitimacy of the Palestinians’ aspirations for a state.“What happened in May was a huge setback to the accords, but it did not reverse them, and it seems nothing will. Israel wants them and the US wants them, but they will not bring peace to the region,” he added.
When clashes erupted between Jews and Arabs in Jerusalem in May, the governments of Bahrain, Morocco, Sudan, and the UAE were pressured by their own publics to side with the Palestinians.
How Arab governments respond to the cycle of violence, particularly those states that have signed up to the Abraham Accords, will no doubt prove critical to the future of the Arab-Israeli rapprochement.
Hussain Abdul-Hussain, a research fellow at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies (FDD) in Washington, told Arab News: “Over recent decades, the Arabs have made anti-Israel rhetoric sacrosanct, almost divine.
“When policies and divinities mix, both are spoiled. Today, the Arabs who understand how modern economies work realize that peace with Israel is not about revenge or honor, but about growing the economy.
“Peace is a definite multiplier of economic growth, and the UAE’s figures prove that. Such Arabs are ready for peace, but they are usually scared of the public shaming that comes with calls for peace with Israel.” Whatever their long-term impact on the region, the Abraham Accords are an undeniable sign of a thaw in long-frozen Arab-Israeli relations. In the words of Houda Nonoo, Bahrain’s former ambassador to the US, the agreements will “no doubt be one of the biggest Middle East milestones in our lifetime.”
She told Arab News: “As we embark on a new era in the Bahrain-Israel relationship, it is important to remember that at the core of this agreement is the desire to create a new Middle East, one built on peace and prosperity for all.
“I believe that the growing partnerships between Bahrain and Israel will lead to sustainable peace in the region.”
*Twitter: @rebeccaaproctor

سيث ج.فرانتزمان/جيرازالم بوست: اتفاقات أبراهام بين العرب وإسرائيل بعد عام واحد وقصتها من الداخل
Abraham Accords, one year later: The inside story
Seth J. Frantzman/jerusalem Post/August 12/2021
http://eliasbejjaninews.com/archives/101340/%d8%b1%d9%8a%d8%a8%d9%8a%d9%83%d8%a7-%d8%a2%d9%86%d8%a7-%d8%a3%d8%a8%d8%b1%d9%88%d9%83%d8%aa%d9%88%d8%b1-%d8%a8%d8%b9%d8%af-%d8%b9%d8%a7%d9%85-%d8%b9%d9%84%d9%89-%d8%aa%d9%88%d9%82%d9%8a%d9%87%d8%a7/
It's been a year. Let's look back on all that has happened since the normalization of relations between Israel and the United Arab Emirates, shortly followed by Bahrain.
“I was in the Oval Office on August 13 when we announced it,” recalls former US ambassador to Israel David M. Friedman. “Today we are all pretty happy, and we are ahead of schedule in terms of how this has developed.”
A year has passed since the announcement that then-US president Donald J. Trump, then-prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed, crown prince of Abu Dhabi and deputy supreme commander of the United Arab Emirates Armed Forces, had spoken and agreed to full normalization of relations between Israel and the United Arab Emirates.
Within weeks the Kingdom of Bahrain had also agreed to normalize relations on September 12.
“The signing of the Abraham Accords will no doubt be one of the biggest Middle East milestones in our lifetime, and as we celebrate its first anniversary, it is an opportunity to reflect on this auspicious time for the Kingdom of Bahrain, and the region more broadly,” recalls Houda Nonoo, Bahrain’s former ambassador to the US and, at the time, the first and only Jewish ambassador from an Arab country to the US.
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By October Sudan had agreed to normalize ties, and in December Morocco was talking rapprochement with Israel.
I recently drove by the liaison office of the Kingdom of Morocco in Tel Aviv. It has a pretty gate, in the style of North African designs. It is now part of the changing landscape of Israel and its relations with countries in the Middle East.
The Abraham Accords were signed on September 15 at the South Lawn of the White House. At the time some critics pilloried the agreements, cast doubt on their substance and later called them an “afterthought.”
A year after the agreements gives us some time to look back at how they came to be and gauge whether they will stand the test of time.
Friedman says, in a conversation with me, that “from my own perspective, I felt there would be a stress point, something that will stress the relationship in the short term.”
That test came with the conflict in Gaza in May. The Accords survived and are flourishing, according to those who helped craft them and according to experts, academics, cultural, religious and political figures from the US to Israel and the Gulf.
In the course of writing this article I reached out to a large number of people, most of whom agreed to speak on the record and provide exclusive details to the Magazine.
“The Abraham Accords have brought about a new chapter in Israel’s relations with the countries in our region. It is the beginning of an era of peace, not only in the form of strategic alliances between states, but, rather, peace between nations, peace on the level of people to people,” says Defense Minister Benny Gantz in a statement.
“On the security front, an alliance of moderate countries is being formed – countries that want to see this region develop and prosper, and that can build a united front in the face of the aggressive and extremist players in the area.
“The Abraham Accords have also opened a ‘window of opportunity’ to advance political steps vis-à-vis the Palestinians. Such steps are crucial for the continuity of the State of Israel as a secure, Jewish and democratic state.”
A LOOK back at the origins of the Accords finds that many paths led to the agreement in the summer of 2020. Some of these processes were long-term, and they occurred on both sides of the Atlantic.
Ahmed Obaid Al Mansoori, a former member of the United Arab Emirates Federal National Council and founder of the Crossroads of Civilizations Museum, the Strategists Center and AlMansoori Consultancy, has been involved in peace work for many years. He speaks about the need to solve problems in civilized and peaceful ways.
Today his museum is one of the unique new sites in the UAE that showcases this tolerance and has hosted many Jewish visitors.
“I was surprised by the announcement,” he recalls. “I knew we had a diplomatic relationship that was evolving simultaneously with developing mutual interests, growing on a wise incremental pace,” he says.
The UAE was also positioning itself as a center of tolerance and dialogue, hosting the pope and 700 religious figures at a Conference on Human Fraternity in February 2019.
Ghanem Nuseibeh, who comes from a prominent Muslim family in Jerusalem, has been working toward peace quietly through meetings for years. Back in the early 2000s he hosted a meeting in London of intellectuals from the Gulf and Israel, including former officials. “The focus was on how to deal with common challenges facing the region, and that is why the relations were built on common interests and realizing a common future.”
In New York, Rabbi Elie Abadie recalls hosting UAE officials for 10 years at his New York synagogue. A year later he is the senior rabbi of the Jewish Council of the Emirates and recalls the joy and happiness when the news was announced.
Nir Boms, a research fellow at the Moshe Dayan Center at Tel Aviv University and a driver of various coexistence projects, says that in the old days people would go to Prague or Cyprus for these kinds of meetings between people from the Gulf and Israel. Now it can be done openly, and people from third countries, such as Pakistan, are attending conferences where Israelis are present and seeing a brave new world being created.
Months before the agreements were announced, the UAE was already making plans for an Abrahamic Family House on Saadiyat Island in Abu Dhabi, a complex that would include a mosque, church and synagogue. The synagogue in the UAE was an example of how things were changing in the region. Kosher catering was already beginning in May of 2020, as articles covered the initiative of Elli Kriel and the idea of “kosherati” food, a blend of kosher food and Emirati cuisine.
These were the “hopes and signs” that Mansoori and others remember were pointing the way to a more harmonious and peaceful region. The tone of media and religious sermons was also changing. If in the past there was any intolerance coming from voices in the UAE, the message by 2020 was that those voices would be sidelined. Winds of change were in the air.
Back in Washington, on October 8, 2020, the Foundation for Defense of Democracies hosted Yousef Al Otaiba, ambassador of the United Arab Emirates to the United States, who spoke with Mark Dubowitz, chief executive of FDD, about the “new normal” of UAE-Israel peace. The two men, who played key roles in setting the stage for the agreements, talked about how the accords specifically commit the two countries to cooperation in economic, scientific, and social fields, a much warmer beginning of ties than the peace Israel had agreed to with Egypt and then Jordan between 1979 and 1994.
Otaiba said in the discussion with Dubowitz “that you are one of the first people to plant this idea in our head. You planted that seed early on. I don’t know how seriously it was, as part of the considerations and the debates and the negotiations that we had, but you were one of the first people to raise the idea of normalization with Israel. And to be honest, it’s something we’ve always discussed. It’s something that we’re not hiding from. We’ve been having debates inside the UAE about what normalization with Israel would look like and when would it happen, and it was just an ongoing discussion.”
Otaiba said that the past years had seen Israeli athletes hosted in the UAE, and Israel invited to have a pavilion at Expo 2020, an event that was delayed due to the pandemic.
From its first days, the Trump administration put a priority on advancing peace between Israel and states in the region.
Robert S. Greenway, who is now at the Hudson Institute and executive director of the Abraham Accords Peace Institute, recalls that the administration focused on several consistent goals in the Middle East. This would include maximum pressure on Iran and the defeat of ISIS.
Greenway served in several positions on the National Security Council, focusing on Iran, and then a portfolio that included Iran, Iraq, Syria and Lebanon, before rising to assistant to the president and at the same time US National Security Council senior director on Middle East and North Africa Affairs.
Greenway would be on the first direct El Al flight 971 to the UAE on August 31, 2020, along with other key players such as US national security advisor Robert O’Brien, senior advisor to the president Jared Kushner, US special representative for international negotiations Avi Berkowitz, US special representative for Iran Brian Hook, US International Development Finance Corporation CEO Adam Boehler and other senior officials.
When he looks back now, he describes the normalization deal as coming out of the administration’s desire to construct an enduring regional security architecture. This idea, sometimes called an “Arab NATO,” began to be discussed more seriously in 2018 and had its roots in Trump’s Saudi Arabia trip in May 2017.
The idea was that normalization with Israel would converge with this new Arab security framework involving key partners of the US, such as Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Jordan and Egypt.
It didn’t come about suddenly, says Greenway. The White House had pushed for a meeting in Warsaw in February 2019 which would be billed as addressing Middle East security but in fact was directed at confronting Iran. Netanyahu tweeted: “what is important about this meeting, and it is not in secret ... is that this is an open meeting with representatives of leading Arab countries, that are sitting down together with Israel in order to advance the common interest of combating Iran.”
Trust had to be built between the countries. Contours of the agreement with the UAE were formed in November 2019, and Morocco was coming on board already 18 months before it publicly announced the rapprochement.
The Trump administration was also pushing economic prosperity as underpinning the peace. In June 2019 the “Peace to Prosperity” economic plan, an aspect of the White House peace plan for Israel and the Palestinians, was rolled out in Bahrain.
At each instance the Palestinians were nonplussed, as were countries such as Iran, Turkey and Qatar, part of a wider regional schism between Turkey and Qatar on the one hand and Saudi Arabia, the UAE and Egypt on the other.
Other wheels were in motion at this time as well. The US had announced it would move its embassy to Jerusalem in December 2017, and the move, in May 2018, came as massive protests in Gaza assaulted Israel’s security fence, leaving dozens dead. The US also said it would leave the Iran deal in May 2018, illustrating some of the convergence between the Iran policy, the Israel policy and the regional strategic concept the administration had put in place.
For many mainstream media this seemed like chaos, but for insiders there was a consistent agenda. Friedman recalls that in early conversations he had with Netanyahu, they had discussed options for diplomatic advancement in the region.
It’s important to remember that in November 2018 Israel’s defense minister Avigdor Liberman resigned, angered by the tepid response to massive rocket fire from Gaza. This set the stage for elections in April 2019. More elections would follow in September 2019, March 2020 and March 2021. The election chaos put a spanner in the timeline in DC.
Nevertheless the overall concept the White House had been discussing with Israel was the opportunity to endorse a new peace agreement that Israel would accept. Then the US would push for peace from the “outside in,” meaning from countries like the Gulf leading toward better relations with the Palestinians.
The peace plan was finally released in January 2020 with the ambassadors of Oman, Bahrain and the UAE in attendance in Washington. Otaiba put out a statement on the peace plan. “The United Arab Emirates appreciates continued US efforts to reach a Palestine-Israel peace agreement. This plan is a serious initiative that addresses many issues raised over the years.”
The plan came with a map and many good ideas, say those involved in it. Palestinian rejection of the proposal would pave the way for Gulf normalization, as the Gulf countries could say they had backed the Trump peace plan and were now not avoiding the Palestinians but merely moving forward while the Palestinians refused to even talk to Israel.
The West Wing push for the Vision for Peace plan in January also got support from Saudi Arabia.
“I remember Saudi Arabia, which we still haven’t normalized with, said they appreciated the effort and said the process should continue under supervision of US. They had up to that point only said they had the Arab Peace Initiative.... we saw that as a significant move on the part of Saudi Arabia,” says Friedman.
“For years there was a recognition that there was a strategic interest in UAE and Bahrain – paradigmatic moderate Sunnis – in joining with Israel as a diplomatic partner, and they were looking for the right time and opportunity. The peace plan and prosperity conference and willingness to suspend sovereignty, taken together, coupled with absurd recalcitrance of the Palestinians and their rejection of jets with COVID supplies, it created an environment where there was enough justification to normalize,” he recalls.”
IN ISRAEL at the Foreign Ministry, Eliav Benjamin, the head of the Middle East Bureau, recalls that he had been dealing with these issues before normalization. “The components included issues we had worked on for a number of months beforehand. While the timing was a surprise, the content was not a surprise.”
Key issues in the spring of 2020 involved the fight against COVID, and the need for flight routes to and from the UAE, which would pass over Saudi Arabia.
Many Israelis were already doing business in the Gulf, and hundreds of companies linked to Israel had dealings there, usually making sure products showed up marked not “made in Israel,” but, rather, made in third countries or through subsidiaries. For instance, one company that made postsurgical bras had to have the “made in Israel” tags removed. Then one day, the owner was told they could stay on.
It’s a globalized world, and Dubai and other areas in the Gulf are key conduits of trade. Israel had some limited relations with these countries going back to the 1990s, including an Israeli Trade Mission in Qatar that was closed in 2000 during the Second Intifada. Prime minister Yitzhak Rabin traveled to Oman in December 1994 and Shimon Peres went there in 1996. Netanyahu would return in the fall of 2018, setting the stage for some of the new warmth toward Israel coming from the Gulf. According to a 1985 AP report, Ariel Sharon had discussions with Sudan’s Jaafar Nimeiri about the airlift of Ethiopian Jews. Morocco and Israel also had limited ties before the agreements.
Deputy Mayor of Jerusalem Fleur Hassan Nahoum, a co-founder of the UAE-Israel Business Council and Gulf-Israel Women’s Forum, has been a major supporter of close ties. Born in London and raised in Gibraltar with a mother from Morocco, she has a deep sense that the Sephardi Jewish heritage of many in Israel forms a natural bridge to peace between Jews and Arabs.
“We didn’t know it would happen so fast, but we knew something was cooking,” she recalls.
Along with Dorian Barak, she had met Aryeh Lightstone and ambassador Friedman. “We had been talking about picking a project, possibly in Jerusalem, that we could do together with the Emiratis.”
By June the Business Council was founded. “We wanted to create people-to-people infrastructure for under-the-radar normalization, which seemed to be going faster. We didn’t really believe it was going to happen so fast.”
In May 2020 the first flight from the UAE landed in Israel carrying humanitarian aid for the Palestinians. In retrospect, it was a symbol; on June 9 a second plane landed, the big Etihad logo emblazoned on it.
Three days later Otaiba wrote an op-ed in Israel’s leading newspaper, Yediot Aharonot, and UAE Director of Strategic Communications at its Foreign Ministry, Hend Al Otaiba, tweeted in Hebrew. A month later, in early July, Israel’s leading defense companies, with roots in state founding, Rafael Advanced Defense Systems and Israel Aerospace Industries, signed a memorandum of understanding with Group 42 in the UAE to fight COVID together.
For Lightstone, the former senior adviser to Friedman and special envoy for economic normalization, enthusiasm for the Accords is effusive.
“It was surreal; there were things accomplished that in your wildest imagination you wouldn’t have thought of them,” he says of the last year.
Each country had its own sensitivity. “I was on every direct first flight; to Abu Dhabi and then Bahrain, and then from Abu Dhabi to Israel, and the first flight to Morocco. What is important to know, recognize and appreciate is that while there was a momentum of success in the region, each one of these opportunities is and was unique on its own.” And it happened during the pandemic.
“I had the unique opportunity to have a front-row seat for the Abraham Accords, maybe at the conception. I was invited by UAE Crown Prince Mohammed bin Zayed to meet with him and bring the first-ever group of evangelical leaders to meet MBZ in October 2018, and we had two hours with the crown prince in the palace just sitting and talking with him about all the major issues,” recalls Joel Rosenberg, editor of All Israel News and author of the forthcoming book Enemies and Allies: An Unforgettable Journey inside the Fast-Moving & Immensely Turbulent Modern Middle East.
Rosenberg says his group was interested in knowing if any Arab leaders in the region were ready to make peace. “We said we had been praying for a long time, but there hasn’t been an Arab leader since King Hussein ready to make peace; and we were looking for the next Arab leader to do so.”
Bin Zayed, known as MBZ, stunned the group by leaning forward and saying “Joel, I am ready to make peace with Israel.”
“We could hardly believe it, we hadn’t come thinking we would get an answer to that question,” says Rosenberg.
On September 7, 2020, Rosenberg received a text message from Dr. Ali al-Nuaimi, an adviser to MBZ, hours before the news broke. “Watch the news closely, big story about to break.”
Back at the White House a senior official tells me that the joint statement on August 13 was crafted with the idea it would exceed the previous peace deals with Egypt and Jordan to lay the groundwork for warmth. The UAE was taking a bold step. While Bahrain had been keen on peace and coexistence for years, the perception was that Saudi Arabia needed to give a green light, and Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman was coordinating with MBZ. The UAE, larger than Bahrain and facing a different set of circumstances, could go first with testing the normalization waters.
“What I cared most about,” says the senior official, was having direct flights. This paid off quickly because within a year 200,000 people had flown to the Gulf.
The senior official points to key milestones, such as coexistence in sports such as rugby, soccer and cycling; finance, security, health and even library ties; coexistence groups like Sharaka that emerged, and then the diplomatic exchanges.
Eitan Na’eh, Israel’s former ambassador to Turkey, would be appointed the lead diplomat in the UAE by January, until Foreign Minister Yair Lapid inaugurated an embassy in Abu Dhabi on June 29, 2021. Mohamed Al Khaja would become the first UAE ambassador to Israel in mid-February 2021.
“It’s been beautiful to watch,” says the senior official.
For many Trump administration officials, there was a sad point. Trump lost the November election, just months after the Accords, and by January they were out of office.
“You have to connect as many wires as you can, and it will fall into hands of other people with different priorities,” the official says. Nevertheless, it is a beacon in the region and a paradigm shift, the crafters say.
Yoel Guzansky, one of Israel’s foremost experts on the Gulf, is a senior research fellow at the Institute for National Security Studies (INSS) specializing in Gulf politics and security.
“If we spoke a year ago, we wouldn’t be saying that in a year from now we will be celebrating a year anniversary agreement with the UAE. We had good relations under the table,” he says.
He has been going to the Gulf since before the Accords. He says one year is not enough to do a full analysis, but it is impressive what has been accomplished. “We tend to get used to things, good or bad, and things become less impressive, and if you look at it in those eyes, so people will look at it as the new normal.”
He points out that while the UAE and Israel have similarities, such as technical innovation, the UAE received a number of incentives to make this happen, such as Israel taking annexation off the table. The UAE is also supposed to get a deal finalized from the US to get fifth-generation F-35 warplanes, which it has wanted for years. The question he asks is what might come next, what would be the price Israel might pay, for instance, for normalization with Riyadh.
Guzansky thinks the UAE took a calculated risk. Days before the accords, Guzansky recalls being at INSS and being on a videoconference with colleagues from the UAE. These kinds of meetings illustrated how normal the UAE was already perceiving the relationship, before the announcement.
Today he looks back and notes that had Trump stayed in office, the momentum of the Accords might have continued to include more countries. Now countries must consider other issues, such as Iran’s growing power and the US drawing down in the region.
AFTER THE Accords were announced and signed, Lightstone recalls, Friedman hosted a delegation from Bahrain at his home in Jerusalem. He pauses, thinking about it. The US ambassador was now in Jerusalem, not Tel Aviv, hosting a delegation from a new peace partner in the Gulf. There were business leaders at the meeting, and it felt natural. This is the message of the Accords many of those involved point to. Once they were done, the sense of normality of working with the Gulf was already there. For some businesspeople who had worked behind the scenes or gone back and forth, this was merely coming in from the cold.
Barak, who has been involved with the Gulf for a decade after investing in an Israeli tech company with significant activity in Abu Dhabi, says the relationship has been developing at a rapid pace.
“There are things that were obvious – trade carried out via third countries [e.g., Cyprus, Jordan] could now flow directly; tourism would bring Israelis to Dubai in droves; Israelis would begin to operate through Dubai as a gateway to the greater Middle East, India, South Asia and beyond.”
No one expected the warmth in people-to-people relations, he says. Friendships are being formed, and religious, cultural and civil society engagement is happening.
George Giles, co-founder of MEA consulting, says that last year has gone “from the establishment of mutual embassies, to kidney donations between the two countries, to business dealings with a $1.1 billion investment from Mubadala in Israeli natural gas.”
For Ambassador Al Khaja, who has been settling in to his new environment in Tel Aviv, “the Accords set a significant historic precedent that also requires an unprecedented approach to tackle the embedded perceptions that developed over the years. The Accords provided an opportunity of new hope and set forth a path that could change our lives in the region for the sake of our children and generations to come.”
Looking at the immediate success, most agree that everything is moving in the right direction, with a few hurdles.
Hassan-Nahoum says that some Israelis thought they’d find a lot of investment from the UAE in venture capital, and have been disappointed it didn’t happen as fast. Trust-building needs to take place. There are many MoUs, and friendships are growing. COVID restrictions have prevented people from the Gulf coming to Israel. Israelis who did work in the Gulf before can now run businesses openly linked to Israel.
“It’s a model for a new era of peace between Israel and Arab countries,” she says.
Mohammed Baharoon, director-general of the Dubai Public Policy Research Center, says that “the bilateral aspect is developing fast, but the surface of regional potential has not been scratched yet.”
He has been meeting Israelis since an IMF meeting in Dubai in 2003, but he describes the cautious optimism that has greeted the Accords as being on the verge of a new discovery but not knowing how it will end. He points out that the agreement is aimed at defusing the identity struggles and religious dimensions of a conflict that has been perceived as a Jewish-Muslim conflict in recent years.
“The conflict calculus has governed the dynamics of the region and needs to be changed. It can’t be achieved without addressing the Palestinian issue.”
That means that while pushing coexistence can reduce radicalization and terrorism in the region, the elephant in the room will remain the absence of movement on the Palestinian issue.
It also means US commitment to the Accords under the Biden administration is key. A special envoy for the Accords would help convince the countries involved of US support. Reports in June said the Biden team might tap former ambassador to Israel Dan Shapiro for an envoy job linked to the Accords’ countries.
IT HAS been a roller-coaster ride in the last year. In the fall of 2021 tens of thousands of Israelis went to the UAE, and dozens of flights were going back and forth a week. Then that stopped as Israel closed its main airport and ramped up vaccinations. Netanyahu waffled on trips to the UAE, eventually leaving office without going.
This left relations up to a new government in Israel and a new US administration. Benjamin points to key visits by Lapid and also key delegations, such as the July 2021 visit to Israel by Mariam Hareb Almheiri, minister of state for food security. Bahrain sent a large delegation with Minister Zayed Al Zayani, who signed an MoU in December 2020.
“It normally takes much longer; our foot is on the gas and not letting go at all,” says Benjamin. “The challenge is getting to know each other. It is a cultural challenge understanding complexities and sensitivities and understanding basic culture on each end.... Understanding the messages on both ends is important.”
Benjamin knows the complexities here, having served in China in the past.
Mansoori says that people in the UAE have been prepared for peace via the strategic vision and messaging of the government.
“The feedback I got was highly positive, and people were very excited,” he recalls. But expectations have been different on both sides. “We are business-oriented, and we expected the pace to be faster for multiple initiatives across different sectors.”
Mike Sussman, CEO of Sussman Corporate Security, who knows the Gulf hospitality well after the past year, agrees. “Trade, peace and tolerance are all part of it. But, ultimately, it is seeing beyond the unknown and each other’s differences and understanding that in order for each other to succeed and achieve that vision, we have to work together where we can contribute to one another’s success.”
He says there should be a regional platform coming out of this peace agreement to look at broader strategy. That means understanding the rising strength of Iran and its connections to Russia and China, for instance.
Like many of those I spoke to, he notes that while Israelis have come to the UAE, few people from the Emirates have been able to go to Israel. They don’t want to ask for special permission, but, rather, to have the ease of travel envisioned in the accords.
“We should move on the reciprocity of openness on both sides, such as exchanges of visits.”
He also mentions that it is important that other countries in the region see the benefit of peace.
“We need to work on building and developing a mechanism for business culture,” he says, noting the importance of sharing technology and local success. This points to becoming more self-reliant as a region and thinking strategically together.
A key test of the accords was the Gaza conflict in May. Friedman, who met with officials from Bahrain and the UAE recently, says that they told him collectively that everyone passed the test. “We passed with flying colors; two leaders used that term. I had a conversation with the foreign minister of UAE, Sheikh Abdullah; he said, ‘Look, the great battle of the 21st century, it’s not one people against another, it’s the extremists against the moderates. It exists all over the world.’”
“Barriers have come down and more will, given the right international support, vision, economic stability and political developments,” says Malcolm Honlein, vice chairman of the Conference of Presidents of Major American Jewish Organizations. “I have seen firsthand even in recent days that [the Accords] have changed many of the prospects for regional cooperation, and there is more openness beyond the signatory countries.”
The devotion to tolerance is what many point to. Barak says the UAE is certainly the most tolerant and peaceful country in the region.
“This is a once-in-a-generational opportunity. If these peace agreements go the way of Egypt and Jordan and become cold, then there is no benefit, and then the Middle East we’ve known becomes the Middle East our kids will know,” says Lightstone.
Business ties will need to increase as well through participation of Israeli companies in trade shows and conferences, says Gil Kraeim of MEA Consultants. “Throughout the year, Israeli companies have participated in major events and trade shows, which started for the first time at GITEX, the biggest tech event in the region.”
For Asher Fredman, CEO of Gulf-Israel Green Ventures, “the combination of Israel and the UAE’s unique strengths, capabilities and spirit can transform the two countries into global leaders in the fields of sustainable innovation and development.”
Greenway agrees and adds that “we are waiting for Israel and Morocco to launch their first business delegation.”
For many Jewish figures in the Gulf, the last year has been momentous as well. Rabbi Menachem Genack, CEO of OU Kosher, says that “in the span of one year, there were many announcements regarding kosher food in all three countries; and as the world’s largest certification agency, we are proud to play a large role in helping them to create more kosher infrastructure in their countries.” It will stimulate Jewish tourism.
Ebrahim Dawood Nonoo, president of the Bahrain Jewish community, says he is thrilled to celebrate this historic milestone – the first anniversary of the Abraham Accords. “This year, we have welcomed many delegations from Israel and expect that number to more than triple in a year or two.... We have been able to have a few minyanim and are hoping to do that more regularly as the number of tourists increases.”
The Iraqi-born Edwin Shuker, who has been living in Europe for the past 50 years and is the outgoing vice president of the Board of Deputies of British Jews, is also moving to the UAE. “We are witnessing a moment in history where Jews and Arabs reconnect as the sons of Abraham. In the next few months I will be moving to Dubai to witness it.”
Ellie Cohanim, senior fellow at the Center for Security Policy and former US deputy special envoy to combat antisemitism, says that this past year has seen unfold a “reunion between Israelis and their Arab neighbors.... With this reunion we are also witnessing a correlating decrease in Jew-hatred and anti-Zionism in the Abraham Accords countries, but also as a ripple effect, throughout the region.”
Houda Nonoo agrees. “As one of the few indigenous Jews in the Arabian Gulf, it is particularly meaningful to me. As a citizen of this region, I am filled with excitement to see the construction of a new Middle East, one focused on coexistence and prosperity.”
She thanks King Hamad bin Isa Al Khalifa and His Royal Highness, Prince Salman Bin Hamad Al Khalifa, the crown prince and prime minister, for their leadership and vision in the signing of the Abraham Accords.
A year after the Accords, they are still impactful.
“It was the kind of news that you needed to double-check was true!” recalls Michael Dickson, executive director, StandWithUs-Israel. “If the initial feeling towards this breakthrough was tantalizing, then the reality a year on is even more so.”
Companies such as IAI stress that they are now looking to grow partnerships in the UAE. The Israeli Foreign Ministry is working “tirelessly” to deepen and expand relations.
“The momentum of the Abraham Accords has opened the door for promoting cooperation in the regional ecosystem. Exhibitions, like CyberTech and the upcoming Dubai Airshow, provide IAI with an opportunity to meet local partners and vendors, and broaden the levels of co-production and co-development of systems. IAI’s activity in the region will cater to the needs of our Emirati customer, adding value to the development and localization of joint technology," says Sharon Biton, the Marketing Vice-President at IAI.
“We would like to see other countries join, and we are working on that, and we want to see our immediate neighbors go further.... We are open for initiatives, and it is an important message for us to relay – a message of the importance of these new relations and the benefit of the relations to the region,” says Benjamin. “In the coming years we will work to strengthen relations with our Palestinian neighbors, to deepen relations with Egypt and Jordan, to further develop our new alliances, and to continue expanding the accords – never hesitating to defend ourselves while never ceasing to chase new prospects for peace,” says Gantz.