English LCCC Newsbulletin For Lebanese, Lebanese Related, Global News & Editorials
For August 26/2020
Compiled & Prepared by: Elias Bejjani
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Bible Quotations For today
And if you have not been faithful with what belongs to another, who will give you what is your own?
Holy Gospel of Jesus Christ according to Saint Luke 16/09-12: “I tell you, make friends for yourselves by means of dishonest wealth so that when it is gone, they may welcome you into the eternal homes. ‘Whoever is faithful in a very little is faithful also in much; and whoever is dishonest in a very little is dishonest also in much. If then you have not been faithful with the dishonest wealth, who will entrust to you the true riches? And if you have not been faithful with what belongs to another, who will give you what is your own?”

Titles For The Latest English LCCC Lebanese & Lebanese Related News & Editorials published on August 25-26/2021
Ministry of Health: 1593 new infections, 5 deaths
US worried about potential collapse in Lebanon, Hezbollah’s missile technology
A senior administration official said the US was prepared to brief Israel’s PM on its approach to the Lebanon-Israel maritime border dispute.
Rahi, Shea tackle necessity of forming government and working to enact reforms
President signs decrees on monitoring energy resources, urgent social aids to public servants
Aoun, Majzoub broach educational situation
Miqati Reportedly Postpones Baabda Visit at Paris Request
Reports: Miqati Urged to Postpone Line-Up Submission
Judge Aoun Issues Search Warrant against Salameh
INL and FBI Provide Counter Public Corruption Training for ISF Members and Judges
Clashes Erupt at Gas Stations in South and North
Geagea says sole solution lies in liberating prices immediately, endorsing ration card
Hospital Owners’ Syndicate: Reserve sufficient for two days, patients’ lives at risk
FPM reiterates denial of any intervention by Bassil in government formation process
National Council for Scientific Research-Lebanon (CNRS-L) deploys first anchored marine laboratory buoy in Lebanese sea
Municipalities and Unions of Municipalities in Lebanon propose new development projects responding to urgent needs in their communities
Lebanon raids discover hoarded fuel, medicine and baby formula/Najat Houssari/Arab News/August 25/2021
No end in sight: Lebanon’s government crisis rages on as country on its knees/Geiege Azar/Arab News/August 25/2021
Let them stop us if they dare' – Why Hezbollah is bringing Iranian fuel to Lebanon/Radwan Mortada/The Cradle/August 25/2021
On m'accuse souvent de m'attaquer dernièrement à la révolution./Jean-Marie Kassab/August 25/2021

Titles For The Latest English LCCC Miscellaneous Reports And News published on August 25-26/2021
Israel claims Iran launched drone strike on tanker
Israel’s new leader to present Iran plan in first White House visit
Israel Warns to Act if Needed 'to Prevent a Nuclear Iran'
Afghan Resistance Leader Vows 'No Surrender'
China Describes "Effective" Talks with Taliban
Brazil detains two French travelers for perching atop iconic statue
Dubai Confirms Arrest Of Italian Drug Lord
Algeria-Morocco crisis: Paris calls for “dialogue” in the interest of regional “stability”
Attacker kills three police and security guard near French embassy in Tanzania
Iran's parliament approves President Raisi's government: AFP
High blood pressure doubled globally in 30 years, study shows
Oil Spill from Power Station Spreads along Syria's Coast
Morocco rejects Algeria’s decision to sever ties as ‘completely unjustifiable’
Saudi-Russian defence agreement reflects Riyadh’s diversification drive
Cyprus to revoke passports of Turkish Cypriot officials

Titles For The Latest The Latest LCCC English analysis & editorials from miscellaneous sources published on August 25-26/2021
Act Now to Save and Learn the Lessons of the Afghan War/Anthony H. Cordesman/CSIS/August 25/2021
How American Weapons Find Their Way to International Criminal Organizations/Emanuele Ottolenghi/The Dispatch-FDD/August 25/2021
Afghanistan's Christians are turning off phones and going into hiding/Kelsey Zorzi/The Hill/August 25/2021Azerbaijani support underpins Turkey’s ambitions in South Caucasus/The Arab Weekly/August 25/2021
A trial in Sweden raises uncomfortable questions about Iranian regime’s past/Ann Torknkvist/Arab News/August 25/2021
How Taliban 2.0 turned into a lethal force/Mohamed Chebaro/Arab News/August 25/2021
Taliban drug trade hints at a way to protect Afghan culture/Rym Tina Ghazal/Arab News/August 25/2021

The Latest English LCCC Lebanese & Lebanese Related News & Editorials published on August 25-26/2021
Ministry of Health: 1593 new infections, 5 deaths
NNA/August 25/2021
The Ministry of Public Health announced 1,593 new coronavirus infection cases, raising the cumulative number of confirmed cases to 595,522.
Five deaths have been recorded.

US worried about potential collapse in Lebanon, Hezbollah’s missile technology
A senior administration official said the US was prepared to brief Israel’s PM on its approach to the Lebanon-Israel maritime border dispute.

Joseph Haboush, Al Arabiya English/25 August ,2021
The US will share its mutual concern with Israel over Iran-backed Hezbollah’s precision-guided missile technology, a senior Biden administration official said Tuesday. “There is a discussion to be had in terms of our mutual concerns, security concerns, about what’s going on in Lebanon. Of course, the Israelis are quite concerned in terms of the precision-guided missile technology transfer piece to Hezbollah, and we’re quite concerned about that,” the US official told Al Arabiya English during a phone briefing with reporters.But the US will also discuss the “real potential for state collapse if the Lebanese political elites do not get their act together and form a new government,” the US official said. Lebanon has been without a fully functioning government for over a year since Hassan Diab’s government resigned following last year’s blast at the Port of Beirut. Poverty has reached unprecedented levels, shortages of medicines and fuel have sparked violence, and the local currency has plummeted by 90 percent.
The international community has offered to provide badly needed financial aid, but it has demanded a new government and reforms to combat corruption and the waste of public funds. Potential offshore fields of natural gas are one way Lebanon has hoped to begin climbing out of its economic and financial crisis. Some of the largest potential reserves lie in disputed waters along Lebanon’s southern maritime border with Israel. The US has tried to mediate a solution for decades. A breakthrough in the yearslong dispute appeared in the works after the Trump administration facilitated the first talks between the sides at the UN headquarters in southern Lebanon last year. Indirect talks have since stalled, and Hezbollah has blamed the US. But the US is ready to resume its diplomatic efforts. “I would just say that, I mean, we'll be ready to brief the [Israeli] prime minister and his team on sort of our approach on that maritime issue,” the US official said. A second US official, also on the call, said the crisis in Lebanon and the formation of a new government was making it difficult to discuss the maritime border dispute. “But we’re hopeful that a new Lebanese government can be formed and that we can pick that up again because it’s very important to us,” the second US official said.
The US ambassador to Lebanon, Dorothy Shea, brushed off Hezbollah’s allegations during an interview with Al Arabiya English last week. “I think there is an interest on both sides to try to give it another go,” she said, adding that Washington was exploring with both sides whether it makes sense to resume “some form of talks.” Shea said she believed the next round of talks would not be in south Lebanon “until we get more of a sense of agreement about what they’re negotiating over.” The diplomat also revealed to Al Arabiya English that talks were held last week among US officials about “some creative ideas that we might be able to bring to the table” as mediators. Pushing back against Hezbollah’s claims that the US was blocking efforts to solve the maritime dispute, Shea said: “The last I checked, the United States offered its services as a mediator and facilitator as a goodwill gesture. We’re not being compensated for that … so we wouldn’t be doing that if we wanted it to fail or if we were just serving the interests of one party, which we were also accused of.”“But ultimately, the parties need to regroup a little bit because they had reached the point of disconnect about what they were even negotiating over,” she said.

Rahi, Shea tackle necessity of forming government and working to enact reforms
NNA/August 25/2021
The Maronite Patriarch, Cardinal Mar Bechara Boutros Al-Rahi, received at the Summer Patriarchal Residence in Diman the US Ambassador to Lebanon, Dorothy Shea, accompanied by Counselor Ethan Lynch.During the meeting, they discussed the overall developments on the Lebanese arena, especially the necessity of forming a government and working on enacting the necessary reforms. The discussions tackled “the various developments in the local arena, especially the issue of the government’s formation and the efforts to achieve the necessary reforms that Lebanon needs,” al-Jadeed TV said.Shea and al-Rahi also stressed the need to “form the government as soon as possible, because the Lebanese people can no longer withstand further economic and social pressures.”At the end of the visit, the patriarch presented a cedar implant to the ambassador

President signs decrees on monitoring energy resources, urgent social aids to public servants
NNA
/August 25/2021
President Michel Aoun signed Wednesday a decree hereby tasking the military and security forces, as well as municipal police, with the monitoring of energy resources and the organization of their distribution until mid-September. Aoun signed another decree hereby granting the Ministry of Finance a treasury advance of LBP 600 billion to be cashed to all public servants in the form of urgent social assistance.

Aoun, Majzoub broach educational situation

NNA
/August 25/2021
President of the Republic, General Michel Aoun, on Wednesday broached the country’s educational situation amid the many difficulties facing the start of the school year. Majzoub also briefed the president on the five-year plan set by the ministry of education till the year 2025.

Miqati Reportedly Postpones Baabda Visit at Paris Request
Naharnet
/August 25/2021
Prime Minister-designate Najib Miqati on Wednesday postponed a visit to the Baabda Palace to Thursday, al-Jadeed TV said. “The postponement of Miqati’s visit to Baabda today came after French interventions that requested some time to resolve some obstacles,” the TV network added. Lebanese journalist Simon Abi Fadel meanwhile told al-Jadeed that Paris had communicated Monday with Miqati to “urge him not to allocate the energy portfolio to the Free Patriotic Movement.”

Reports: Miqati Urged to Postpone Line-Up Submission
Naharnet
/August 25/2021
Prime Minister-designate Najib Miqati “had made up his mind and was intending to present a new cabinet line-up to President Michel Aoun” on Tuesday, according to media sources. The sources told al-Liwaa newspaper, in remarks published Wednesday, that “local parties including Hizbullah have contacted Miqati to convince him to give more time for solving the conflicts and finding common ground with Aoun,” before deciding on the line-up. The sources added that “a remarkable French drive was meanwhile urging Miqati to intensify consultations and give a few additional days before making a final decision concerning the line-up.”At the same time French diplomats are “encouraging Miqati to continue his mission,” according to the sources.

Judge Aoun Issues Search Warrant against Salameh
Naharnet
/August 25/2021
Judge Ghada Aoun issued on Wednesday a search warrant for Central Bank Governor Riad Salameh in the case against the Mecattaf firm and the SGBL bank, TV networks said. The search warrant was issued after Riad Salameh refrained from attending several sessions in the case of the illegal money transfers of the beforementioned company and bank.“I did my job,” Aoun said, urging the security agencies to act.

INL and FBI Provide Counter Public Corruption Training for ISF Members and Judges
Naharnet
/August 25/2021
In collaboration with the FBI, the U.S. Department of State's Bureau of International Narcotics and Law Enforcement Affairs (INL) at the U.S. Embassy in Beirut has conducted a training on countering public corruption at the Internal Security Forces (ISF) academy in Aramoun, the Embassy said on Wednesday. "Twenty-four ISF members and four judges were able to complete the training and benefit from the knowledge of the FBI experts," the Embassy added in a statement."Since 2007, the U.S. Government, through INL funding, has invested approximately $197 million in training and equipment for the ISF that has helped to professionalize and modernize Lebanon’s police forces, increase the country’s security and stability, and promote the rule of law," the statement said.

Clashes Erupt at Gas Stations in South and North

Naharnet
/August 25/2021
A group of young men on Wednesday attacked a gas station in the southern town of Msayleh and assaulted its owner and his three sons, al-Jadeed TV reported. They “attacked the owner and his sons with batons and sharp objects, fired gunshots in the air and tried to smash and torch the station, leaving several people injured,” the TV network said. The owner had appeared on al-Jadeed earlier in the day and accused “extortion gangs” of imposing their control over his gas station. Citizens stranded at the gas station meanwhile urged security forces to intervene to contain the situation. Elsewhere, a dispute at a gas station in the northern region of al-Beddawi escalated into a fistfight and gunfire. An altercation at another Beddawi gas station also erupted into gunfire. The reports blamed the clashes on disputes between citizens and the workers of the two gas stations due to the major vehicles congestion that the two stations witnessed. The two incidents sparked panic among citizens as an army force arrived at the two stations and worked on containing the situation.

Geagea says sole solution lies in liberating prices immediately, endorsing ration card
NNA
/August 25/2021
Lebanese Forces Party leader, Samir Geagea, on Wednesday said via his Twitter account: “All the wasteful acts that the current authority pillars are carrying out on the issue of fuel, medicines and other commodoties, will not lead to any result,” stressing that the only solution lies in the immediate liberation of prices and the endorsement of the ration card.

Hospital Owners’ Syndicate: Reserve sufficient for two days, patients’ lives at risk
NNA/August 25/2021
The Syndicate of Hospital Owners in Lebanon on Wednesday issued the following statement: “The diesel crisis is impacting the work of hospitals after the Syndicate had been informed that diesel had run out in Tripoli and Zahrani facilities, and very limited quantities remain with private importing companies. Most hospitals’ reserves will only last for two days, and some for one day, and as such we are facing an imminent danger that directly threatens the lives of patients.”

FPM reiterates denial of any intervention by Bassil in government formation process
NNA
/August 25/2021
The Free Patriotic Movement (FPM) on Wednesday reiterated in a statement its utter denial of any sort of interference by MP Gebran Bassil in the ongoing cabinet formation negotiations. The statement also affirmed that Bassil was only playing the role of a facilitator to help reach an agreement over a cabinet lineup.

National Council for Scientific Research-Lebanon (CNRS-L) deploys first anchored marine laboratory buoy in Lebanese sea
NNA/August 25/2021
Experts of the National Centre for Marine Sciences of the National Council for Scientific Research – Lebanon (NCMS-CNRSL), the team working on the CANA-CNRS Research Vessel, in very close cooperation with the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN), and with logistical support from the Lebanese Naval Forces, deployed the first anchored off-shore marine laboratory buoy (Smart Buoy) in Lebanon on August 14, 2021. Funded by the Royal Norwegian Embassy in Beirut, through the Coastal Ecosystem Resilience project of IUCN ROWA; the buoy will enable, for the first time in the country, to monitor real-time oceanographic data and scale up marine conservation efforts in Lebanon. Located 1.4 km offshore Beirut, the buoy is equipped with sensors providing information on multiple sea water parameters, such as temperature and salinity, turbidity, pH, CO2, dissolved oxygen and chlorophyll levels. It also features a full weather station, and an immersed instrument for measurements of currents and waves, collecting continuously essential data over time. The scientific management of the buoy is ensured by the CNRS-L and its scientific team.
The unit can serve as an early warning monitor of coastal environmental events such as sea level rise, sudden shifts in sea surface temperature, and tsunamis. Moreover, the smart buoy contributes to monitoring the impact of climate change trends such as fossil pollution, the increase of CO2 levels in air and sea, sea water acidification. Their direct impact on fisheries, biodiversity, coastal environments and coastal communities is subsequently evaluated. The data collected will support CNRS-L collaborative marine projects and foster cooperation with donor institutions, especially IUCN, the Norwegian Embassy and other international partners through expanding the network, the number of buoys deployed facing major coastal cities in the country, and supporting projects for the protection and sustainability of the Mediterranean Basin. The data will also be relayed to decision makers to help in better policy planning and strengthen cooperation within relevant scientific networks. Investment in innovation and support of the knowledge economy of Lebanon need to be maintained and strengthened, not despite of, - but especially in light of the current crises the country is facing. The unit will bring important knowledge to understand the hydrodynamics and other parameters directly affecting the marine ecosystem in Lebanon and contribute to the preservation of the marine environment as an essential element in the sustainable development of the country.

Municipalities and Unions of Municipalities in Lebanon propose new development projects responding to urgent needs in their communities
NNA/August 25/2021
In an effort to support their communities, representatives of municipalities and Unions of Municipalities presented proposals and sought funding for local economic development and basic service projects, that they developed as part of an activity launched by the Municipal Empowerment and Resilience Project (MERP). MERP is a joint initiative implemented by the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) and the United Nations Human Settlements Programme (UN-Habitat) and funded through the European Union (EU). Municipalities and Unions of Municipalities representatives from the Urban Community Al-Fayhaa, the Federation of Municipalities of the Northern and Coastal Matn and the Union of Tyre Municipalities, presented their proposals to development partners, funding agencies, as well as to their communities and the wider public through a live broadcast. In the development of the proposals, the 17 municipalities and two unions collaborated with youth and civil society and participated in extensive online training and coaching sessions on proposal development, organized by the Renée Mouawad Foundation, the implementing partner for this activity. This approach led to the development of technical skills necessary to develop strong proposals for future projects that could attract external funding. "While a key objective of MERP is to implement basic service and local economic development projects that benefit communities, such as projects that focus on solar farms or the establishment of agricultural markets, we do this by empowering municipalities and provide them with the capacity and tools needed to support their communities, not only now but also in the future. Our approach shows that with a little support, municipalities and unions are very capable to develop high quality proposals for projects that support their communities and that they are highly committed to do so." said Marija De Wijn, MERP's Chief Technical Advisor."Today was an important opportunity for the 19 municipalities and unions of municipalities to present proposals for basic services and local economic development, in order to secure funding under the Municipal Empowerment and Resilience Project (MERP) as well as through other donors" said Gianandrea Villa, Local Governance Officer at the EU Delegation in Lebanon. As a next step, MERP will support the development and implementation of eight municipal projects and two unions projects by 2022. Additionally, MERP aims to support non selected projects to secure support through other funding partners through the Municipal Fair.

Lebanon raids discover hoarded fuel, medicine and baby formula
Najat Houssari/Arab News/August 25/2021
BEIRUT: Raids carried out by Lebanon security forces discovered millions of liters of subsidized fuel hidden in underground tanks to be sold later on the black market at new prices. Some of the tanks were merely covered by sand. “Monopolized” medicine and baby formula were seized, too.
News of the hoarding has only added to the anger of Lebanese citizens, who have been suffering through exhausting fuel and medicine shortages for months. Long queues outside gas stations and empty shelves at pharmacies are common across the country.
The largest quantities of hidden subsidized fuel were found in Hawsh Al-Omara in Zahle, Bekaa, where more than 1.5 million liters of gasoline were seized. Scenes of Caretaker Health Minister Hamad Hassan raiding depots in the south of Lebanon and the Shouf area that contained medicine missing from pharmacies have also left citizens fuming. The depots contained medicine that could treat patients with coronavirus (COVID-19), blood pressure, and respiratory problems. Antibiotics and thousands of infant formulas — all subsidized at the official rate ($1=1,500 LBP) — were also discovered. “The raids are based on an electronic tracking system of ‘monopolized’ medicine,” Hassan said. “The system is very precise and accurate.”The raid operation revealed a partnership between Hussein Fneish, brother of Hezbollah minister Mohammed Fneish, and Issam Ahmed Khalifa, of the NewPharm Company in Lebanon.
However, the timing of Hassan’s raids were criticized. Lebanon’s Central Bank has not opened credit lines for imports for three months as laws were put in place to prohibit free imports.“These security campaigns and raids should have been carried out earlier,” Issam Araji, head of the Health Parliamentary Committee, told Arab News. “Medicine and fuel should have never been hoarded. Following these raids, Lebanon seemed like a floating city in a sea of gasoline and diesel. The dangerous part is that the fuel was being stored in residential neighborhoods.”
Araji, who is also a cardiologist, said he had warned authorities about the hoarding of medicine for more than a year.
“But they insisted that people were storing the medicine in their houses,” Araji said. “People cannot afford their daily bread, how would they be able to store all of the medicine? I think that the health minister has finally decided to take action because he received information about companies hiding and storing the medicine. These campaigns will all be in vain unless offenders are punished to deter others.” Although the country has started to unload ships of imported fuel and distribute it to gas stations, queues outside the filling stations did not get any shorter on Wednesday. Most drivers parked throughout the night and slept in their cars, hoping to fill up their vehicles in the morning. Adnan Naccouzi, 69, suffered a stroke while waiting in a long queue for gas in the hot weather and without drinking water. He has been recovering inside the intensive care unit at a Beirut hospital for the past 24 hours.
Authorities have said fuel will be sold according to new prices, amid a gradual reduction of fuel subsidies.As of Wednesday, a 20-liter canister of gasoline was sold for 133,000 Lebanese pounds ($88) and the same canister of diesel for 99,000 pounds. The cost of transportation has automatically increased, where the fare rose to 20,000 pounds for each passenger; more than double the price of the previous day.
Despite the public calls to arrest monopolists and put them in prison, hoarding is classified by the Lebanese penal code as a misdemeanor and sanctioned either by a fine or up to six months in prison.Meanwhile, Judge Ghada Aoun issued a search and investigation warrant against Lebanon’s Central Bank Gov. Riad Salameh. This comes five days after setting a date for an investigation session — that he did not attend — over accusations of money laundering and money transfers abroad. Lebanon’s State Prosecutor Ghassan Oueidat in April dismissed Judge Aoun from the case. But she has insisted on proceeding with her investigations and broke into a money exchange company with the help of activists from the Free Patriotic Movement. In other developments, the country’s caretaker premier Hassan Diab will not appear before Judge Tarek Bitar, who is investigating last year’s Beirut blast. Diab was supposed to be questioned as a defendant in the case on Thursday, but has insisted that he should be questioned by the Supreme Council for the Trial of Presidents and Ministers. Judge Fadi Sawan, the investigating judge who preceded Bitar, listened to Diab’s testimony in his capacity as a witness more than a year ago. In that testimony, Diab acknowledged the presence of the ammonium nitrate that was illegally stored at the port and explained why he changed his mind about visiting the site just days before the explosion.


No end in sight: Lebanon’s government crisis rages on as country on its knees
Geiege Azar/Arab News/August 25/2021
DUBAI: More than 12 months since Lebanon’s cabinet resigned and with the country teetering on the brink of collapse, politicians look unlikely to form a much-needed government any time soon, sources warn. Despite one of the world’s largest-ever non-nuclear explosions killing more than 200 people, soaring hyperinflation, food insecurity and crippling fuel shortages, leaders have continued to dig their heels in while two designated prime ministers have come and gone. Najib Mikati, a billionaire businessman and former PM, is the latest to take on the mantle, promising a swift formation of a government within a month when he was appointed on Jul. 26. “I gave my proposals, President Michel Aoun approved most of them and he made some remarks which are acceptable. God willing, we will be able to form a government soon,” Mikati said two days later.
A month has passed, and Mikati is facing the same fate as his two predecessors — Mustapha Adib and Saad Hariri — who both failed to come to terms with Aoun.
Mikati is set to meet with the president on Thursday afternoon, with sources noting that both men are far from coming to terms on a government.  “I believe Mikati will be forced to step down at some point like the others,” Mustapha Allouche, the Future Movement’s vice president, the party formed by Hariri’s late father, told Arab News. According to Lebanon’s sectarian power-sharing model, the president, a Maronite Christian, and the prime minister-designate, a Sunni Muslim, must both agree on a cabinet lineup in unison that is split equally between Christians and Muslims. “What is happening now is merely a continuation of what has transpired over the past 12 months, with each political bloc maneuvering based on its own calculations,” Rosana Bou Monsef, a political analyst and veteran columnist for Lebanese daily An-Nahar, told Arab News.
At the core of the issue, she said, is the president’s Free Patriotic Movement trying to secure favorable terms in the upcoming government, which could stay in power until after Aoun leaves office next year.
Lebanon is set to hold parliamentary elections in May, which given the turbulent political landscape and security situation, could be delayed. This would pave the way for the upcoming government to stay in place, take key decisions moving forward and exert pressure on political opponents.
“It is becoming increasingly clear that the problem doesn’t lie with who will head the government but with the president’s group’s unwillingness to form a government except on its terms,” Bou Monsef said. After nine months of grueling negotiations and a number of public spats with the president, Hariri stepped down in mid-July, saying “God help Lebanon” as he left the presidential palace. Hariri had accused the president of blocking the formation of a cabinet in which the FPM, the party he founded and currently headed by his son-in-law MP Gebran Bassil, lacks veto power. Eddy Maalouf, an FPM parliamentarian, denied the accusations, telling Arab News that the deadlock stems from Hariri and Mikati’s attempts to encroach on the constitution and name several Christian ministers.
“They must afford the president’s bloc the same rights afforded to the other parties,” he said. Further complicating matters is Hezbollah Secretary-General Hassan Nasrallah’s announcement on Aug. 19 that the party had secured fuel shipments from Iran.  Amid typical governmental absenteeism, the Iranian-backed Hezbollah has seemingly taken matters into its own hands, vowing that fuel tankers would set sail to Lebanon from the sanction-ridden country. If Hezbollah follows through with its promise and the tankers actually do dock in Lebanon, it would open up the Lebanese state to the possibility of sanctions from the US, which has vowed to punish anyone that deals with Tehran.  “The Iranian fuel has put Mikati in an extremely tough position as his government program was based on cooperating with the international community and Gulf countries to secure financial assistance for Lebanon,” Bou Monsef told Arab News. This was echoed by Maalouf, who maintained that Mikati is “hesitating in moving forward with the formation of the government in light of this development.” The possibility of Mikati stepping down is now gaining traction, Bou Monsef noted, “despite the international community urging him to move forward with negotiations.”Mikati’s resignation would have a ripple effect across Lebanon’s political landscape, Allouche said. “If Mikati steps down, we’ll have to reconsider our calculations,” Allouche said when responding to a question on whether Hariri’s Future Movement bloc would resign from parliament. Sami Fatfat, a Future Movement MP, held out hope that a government would be formed but assured his party is “looking into different options, including mass resignations” if Mikati steps down.
“The next couple of days will be decisive,” he noted, as Lebanon braces for the potential arrival of the first shipment of Iranian fuel coupled with the end of Mikati’s one-month deadline.

Let them stop us if they dare' – Why Hezbollah is bringing Iranian fuel to Lebanon
Radwan Mortada/The Cradle/August 25/2021
As Lebanon's economic crisis deepens amidst an effective US embargo, Hezbollah begins to supply the Lebanese population.
The chokehold on Lebanon has grown even tighter, thanks to the embargo imposed against it by the United States and its Arab allies in the Persian Gulf. This comes at the lowest point of Lebanon’s two-year-old economic crisis, a catastrophe the World Bank calls the worst the world has seen since 1850. The country’s sudden-but-deliberate fuel shortage, vital to essential daily activity and life-saving medical services, has accelerated this alarm. Today, bread is in shortage and hospitals are sending out distress calls, civilians are camping in front of petrol stations, and water has all but disappeared from supermarket shelves. With general government inaction and the failure of Lebanon’s political parties to form a new government, Hezbollah has forged ahead with its plan to import fuel from Iran. A few weeks ago, Hezbollah Secretary General Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah had paved the way by saying that if the government does nothing to resolve the fuel crisis, “Hezbollah will make arrangements with Iran, buy gasoline and diesel vessels, bring them to Beirut Port, and let the government [if it can] prohibit their delivery to the Lebanese people.” In a later speech, he added: “The brothers in Hezbollah are currently in Iran to complete the gasoline and diesel deal, and we will deliver them soon, either by land or by sea.
Last week, Nasrallah announced the news of imminent oil imports from Iran, warning the world not to interfere with the fuel tanker that set sail from the Iranian coast towards Lebanon.
A Lebanese expert in oil and gas governance in the MENA region, Laury Haytayan, estimates that it will take 15 days for the Iranian gasoline tanker departing from the southern Iranian port of Bandar Abbas to reach Lebanon. Haytayan says the ship will pass the Strait of Hormuz, then Bab al-Mandab, and sail through the Red Sea into the Suez Canal before heading to Lebanon. Likewise, a maritime expert speaking on condition of anonymity suggested another route the Iranian oil tanker could take: the Cape Route near South Africa, northwards and through the Strait of Gibraltar, crossing Cypriot and Greek shores to reach the Mediterranean coast. This route, he noted, would take the ship 45 days to arrive.
Lebanon’s Minister of Energy Raymond Ghajar says that he has not received a request to allow Iranian oil into the country, and notes that Nasrallah “chose his words correctly when he said that the ship sailed from Iran to the Mediterranean Sea, and not Lebanese territorial waters,” which opens the possibility that the ship will not dock in Lebanese ports. It is altogether possible, therefore, that the ship will head towards the Syrian coast to unload at the Baniyas refinery, and then be transported by land to Lebanon.
As soon as Nasrallah first announced his offer to provide fuel for Lebanon, former Prime Minister Saad Hariri and Lebanese Forces Party Executive Chairman Samir Geagea – both of whom are affiliated with Saudi Arabia – denounced the move, accusing the Hezbollah leader of pushing Lebanon into a war between two axes. Previously, neither of them had said a word about the suffering of Lebanese patients in hospitals or their humiliatingly long waits at gas stations. Moreover, neither took the initiative to appeal to their Saudi patrons to assist Lebanon. If anything, both were painfully aware that Saudi Arabia was covertly obstructing the formation of a Lebanese government.
An Iraqi source, who took part in the Iran–Saudi negotiations organized by Prime Minister Mustafa Kadhimi, revealed to The Cradle that when the Iranian delegate mentioned the issue of Lebanon during the negotiations, the Saudi delegate quickly interrupted: “Lebanon is not a priority for us. We don’t want to discuss Lebanon now.”
Hezbollah, however, has been clear in its message that the aim of importing Iranian oil is not to cause a clash, but simply to provide essential fuel for the Lebanese population. Before Nasrallah announced the first shipment, Hezbollah staff gathered information from hospitals and bakeries to work out their monthly fuel requirements. Zahrani power plant manager Ziad al-Zain tells The Cradle that Lebanon needs about 10 million liters of diesel a day for its electricity needs, and that the Zahrani plant accounts for 15 percent of gasoline consumption in the entire country.
Sources informed of Hezbollah’s internal discussions during the past few weeks reveal that the deliberations focused on whether to import the oil by sea or by land, and to investigate both options and consequences.
According to the sources, a specialized committee, supervised directly by Nasrallah, was set up to conduct research and identify a solution for the fuel crisis. Three recommendations were provided.
Initially, the committee proposed that the work should be carried out by the Lebanese government, with the government formulating the oil contracts. Hezbollah went so far as to negotiate the use of the Lebanese lira to pay for the imported oil, but the government did not respond to this proposal. The second recommendation was to pressure Central Bank Governor Riad Salameh to continue opening credit lines for fuel subsidies, especially as the financial crisis was just beginning to unfold.
The third recommendation was to work within the existing margins of the Ministry of Energy — for example, through the communications that led Lebanon’s General Security Director Abbas Ibrahim to contact Iraq for oil, before those talks also fizzled over internal legislative obstacles. Despite Iraq’s responsiveness to quickly provide Lebanon with fuel, it is the Lebanese side that has delayed the process. The hurdle, it seems, was in submitting the Iraq oil proposal to parliament’s Committee of Legislation and Consultation for consideration, where it quickly disappeared into a black hole.
Amin Nasser, director of the Iraqi Media Network in Lebanon and the Levant, who accompanied the Lebanese delegation to Iraq alongside Abbas Ibrahim and Energy Minister Ghajar, says the delays have been entirely caused by Lebanese internal political obstruction. Nasser, however, also disclosed that there was a decision to override the obstructions and issue a tender, and suggests that Iraqi oil will arrive in Lebanon on 3 September, although this has yet to be confirmed.
Another informed Iraqi source told The Cradle: “There were no obstacles on the Iraqi side, as Baghdad’s offer was made without conditions. However, there was one last-minute condition set by Iraq’s Minister of Finance, Dr. Abdul-Amir Allawi, head of the Iraqi negotiating team, related to the need to place tender announcements for companies interested in refining Iraqi oil through an official online platform linked to the Lebanese Ministry of Energy. And if a company is chosen, we must be informed of the name, address and details of this company, which will deal directly with the Iraq’s Oil Marketing Company, SOMO.”The Iraqi source points out that subsequently, “no Lebanese or foreign companies were publicly announced through any official website or online platform linked to the Ministry of Energy, and no mechanisms were put in place to choose companies, nor tenders, nor who won them. The only thing mentioned was that there were five unidentified competing companies, which Iraq has no knowledge of, and were not placed on the platform.”
As for the Iraqi fuel arriving within the first few days of September, that flimsy expectation likely relates to Lebanese Minister Ghajar informing Iraq that he has completed administrative and technical procedures, including overland shipping, and that boat shipments were scheduled to sail in the next two days.
“So far, we have received no direct answers from the Lebanese side,” The Cradle’s Baghdad source says, adding that the Iraqi side remains silent so as not to exacerbate the Lebanese problem. “Iraq says we have offered oil unconditionally, and Lebanon must take action to clear its goods. In the case that it cannot do so, then we can help by shipping one million tons at the expense of the Iraqi government,” the source explains.
It was this kind of dead-end, accountability-lacking negotiations that prompted Hezbollah to knock on Iran’s door for fuel. According to sources close to the Lebanese resistance group, Hezbollah’s plan is to buy fuel from Iran with payment facilities and under contracts signed between the two parties. These sources say the first shipment of diesel oil will be a gift from the Iranian people to the Lebanese people. However, Iranian news reports have said that a group of Shia businessmen assumed the cost for the first oil tanker.
Within hours of Nasrallah’s bold 19 August speech, Lebanese President Michel Aoun received a phone call from Washington’s Beirut Ambassador Dorothy Shea, informing him of the US administration’s decision to help Lebanon receive Egyptian gas and electricity from Jordan via Syria. This Egyptian-Jordanian-Syrian proposal is not new. IMF Executive Director Mahmoud Mohieldin, in an earlier visit to Lebanon, assured officials that Jordan is able to obtain US approval to exempt Egyptian gas from the Caesar Act (a piece of US domestic legislation crafted to punish any party that does business with or through Syria), allowing its transfer through Jordan and Syria to Lebanon without being subject to US sanctions.
Hezbollah’s first reaction to the US ambassador’s “offer” was a public lashing by Hezbollah MP Hassan Fadlallah: “Instead of being ashamed of herself, and hiding the shame of her administration from [events] in Kabul airport to the siege of Beirut, the US ambassador is trying to justify American aggression against Lebanon, exposing, by her usual shamelessness, the responsibility her administration bears in the suffering of the Lebanese people when she admitted to her ability to bring funding from the World Bank to transfer electricity from Jordan via Syria, which is besieged by the American-imposed Caesar Act.”
Fadlallah also said that “preventing access to electricity via Syria is an American decision, which was only revised because of the fuel ship arriving from the Islamic Republic. This also means that when the United States decides to lift its hand from its preventative decisions, the pain of the Lebanese people could [easily] be alleviated.” He added that “the timing of the US ambassador’s announcement is an explicit condemnation of its own administration, which has been prohibiting any foreign assistance to the Lebanese people, including transferring their own money from Syrian banks, and providing Lebanon with life-saving products, a matter that only requires it to signal its approval. All the while, it has been protecting its corrupt allies and threatening to impose sanctions against those who compromise [American] influence within state institutions.”
Nasrallah announced in his 22 August speech that the fleet of Iranian fuel ships has effectively begun, and that a second Iranian ship will set sail toward Lebanon in a matter of days. The Hezbollah chief spoke about Lebanese businessmen who would pay for the fuel, revealing that they were ready for this sacrifice, even if they were placed on the US sanctions list. The aim behind this action, Nasrallah said, is to alleviate the suffering of the people, and that the fuel will be for all Lebanese and all residents of Lebanon. He did, however, prioritize hospitals, pharmaceutical factories, and bakeries.
As for US Ambassador Dorothy Shea and her “promises,” this was nothing more than “selling illusions” to the Lebanese people, Nasrallah parried. Her words, he said, “confirm that her country is responsible for preventing electricity and fuel from [entering] Lebanon, and that the Americans and Saudis have sought to ignite a civil war in Lebanon over the past years, but had clearly failed to do so.”
Sayyed Nasrallah also said that importing gas from Egypt and electricity from Jordan requires negotiations with Syria, something that the Lebanese state could have formally requested itself from the Syrian state had it not been under an economic embargo imposed on it by the US.

On m'accuse souvent de m'attaquer dernièrement à la révolution.
Jean-Marie Kassab/August 25/2021
presque autant que je le fais vis à vis de l'occupant.
C'est entièrement vrai.
Je le fais dans le but de secouer la révolution pour la faire sortir des chemins empruntés jusque là et qui n'ont abouti strictement à aucun changement souhaitable pendant que le pays sombre irrevésiblement dans la misère totale et deviendra bientôt une province iranienne.
Si je ménage relativement ouvertement l'occupant iranien c'est parce que je gére mon énergie et mon effort pour faire de l'utile.
De tte façon ni Nasrallah ni Aoun ni Berry ne liront mes missives ou surtout les tweets des révolutionnaires de notre côté. A peine si l'un des sous fiffres rattachés aux services de sécurités du hezb les lira, et en guise de rapport écrira "rien à signaler" chef et se hatera d'aller diner chez lui, un sourire aux lèvres.
Lokman Slim ne fut tué que lorsqu' il franchit une barrière et le cap des paroles et entreprit une action qui dérangea...
Mesdames et messieurs de la thawra je ne vous laisserai tranquilles que lorsque vous agirez de sortr que le sous fiffre iranien fasse un long rapport inquiétant et n' aie auncun appétit pour diner.
C 'est alors que je me tairai et vous applaudirai .

The Latest English LCCC Miscellaneous Reports And News published on August 25-26/2021
Israel claims Iran launched drone strike on tanker
AP/August 2021
JERUSALEM: Israel’s defense minister on Wednesday accused Iran of launching a deadly drone strike on an oil tanker last month from its territory and reiterated that Israel would act alone if needed to stop Iran from obtaining nuclear weapons. Benny Gantz spoke as Israeli Prime Minister Naftali Bennett was visiting Washington to discuss Iran with Biden administration officials during his first state visit in Washington. The Mercer Street, an oil tanker that was sailing in the Arabian Sea off Oman, was struck by a drone aircraft on July 29. The attack killed two, a British national and a Romanian. The tanker is managed by a firm owned by an Israeli billionaire. The US, Britain and Israel have all blamed Iran for the drone strike on the Mercer Street, but no country has yet offered evidence or intelligence to support their claims. Iran has denied any wrongdoing. “Our assessment is that the UAV employed in the Mercer Street attack was launched from Iranian territory and approved by Iranian leadership,” Gantz told foreign diplomats in a briefing. His remarks were released by his office. Gantz, a former Israeli army chief, has previously warned that Israel is prepared to take military action against Iran and called for international action to halt Iranian aggression. The two countries have been locked in a shadow war for years, which in recent months has taken a higher profile after a long string of attacks on merchant vessels. The attacks began after then-President Donald Trump unilaterally withdrew in 2018 from the nuclear deal between Iran and world powers, which saw Iran limit its enrichment of uranium in exchange for the lifting of economic sanctions.President Joe Biden has said he’s willing to rejoin the accord, but talks over salvaging the deal have stalled in Vienna. Gantz doubled down on those threats on Wednesday, saying that Israel “has the means to act and will not hesitate to do so — I do not rule out the possibility that Israel will have to take action in the future in order to prevent a nuclear Iran.”
Pope’s comments
Meanwhile, Israel’s top Jewish religious authorities have told the Vatican they are concerned about comments that Pope Francis made about their books of sacred law and have asked for a clarification.
In a letter, Rabbi Rasson Arousi, chair of the Commission of the Chief Rabbinate of Israel for Dialogue with the Holy See, said the comments appeared to suggest Jewish law was obsolete. Vatican authorities said they were studying the letter and were considering a response. Rabbi Arousi wrote a day after the pope spoke about the Torah, the first five books of the Hebrew Bible, during a general audience on Aug. 11. The Torah contains hundreds of commandments, or mitzvot, for Jews to follow in their everyday lives. The measure of adherence to the wide array of guidelines differs between Orthodox Jews and Reformed Jews. At the audience, the pope, who was reflecting on what St. Paul said about the Torah in the New Testament, said: “The law (Torah) however does not give life. “It does not offer the fulfilment of the promise because it is not capable of being able to fulfil it ... Those who seek life need to look to the promise and to its fulfilment in Christ.”


Israel’s new leader to present Iran plan in first White House visit
Reuters/August 25/2021
JERUSALEM/WASHINGTON: New Israeli Prime Minister Naftali Bennett plans to push for a new Iran strategy during his first White House visit. He is saying he will urge US President Joe Biden not to revive the 2015 nuclear deal with Tehran. Biden’s aides hope the talks will set a positive tone for his relationship with Bennett, a far-right politician and high-tech millionaire who ended Benjamin Netanyahu’s record 12-year run as prime minister in June. This would stand in sharp contrast to years of tensions between the conservative Netanyahu, who was close to former President Donald Trump, and the last Democratic administration led by Barack Obama with Biden as his vice president. The visit gives the US administration an opportunity to demonstrate business as usual with its closest Middle East ally while it contends with the chaotic situation in Afghanistan, Biden’s biggest foreign policy crisis since taking office.
The talks will be relatively low-key. The two leaders are expected to speak briefly to a small pool of reporters during their Oval Office talks but will not hold a joint news conference. Bennett is less dramatic but publicly just as adamant as Netanyahu in pledging not to allow Iran, which Israel views as an existential threat, to build a nuclear weapon, telling a cabinet meeting on Sunday the situation was at a critical point. “Iran is advancing rapidly with uranium enrichment and has already significantly shortened the time it would take to accumulate the material required for a single nuclear bomb,” he said.
Bennett said he would tell Biden: “This is the time to stop the Iranians, not to give them a lifeline in the form of re-entering an expired nuclear deal.”A US official said Bennett’s expected entreaties for the Biden administration to drop its efforts to revive the agreement are not likely to bear fruit.
To Israeli acclaim, Trump in 2018 withdrew the United States from the deal between six world powers and Iran. He deemed it too advantageous for Tehran and reimposed US sanctions.In a report seen last week by Reuters, the International Atomic Energy Agency said Iran had accelerated uranium enrichment to near weapons-grade.
Iran has consistently denied seeking a bomb, but the enrichment raised tensions with the West as both sides seek to resume talks on reviving their deal to curb Tehran’s nuclear activities in return for the lifting of sanctions. Bennett told his cabinet he would present Biden with “an orderly plan that we have formulated in the past two months to curb the Iranians, both in the nuclear sphere and vis-à-vis regional aggression.” He gave no further details. Asked on Monday about any new Iran strategy proposal from Bennett, US State Department spokesman Ned Price said: “I will leave it to the Israeli prime minister to describe to the American president any thoughts that the Israeli government may have when it comes to Iran.”
Bennett, 49, is the son of American immigrants to Israel. A former head of Israel’s main West Bank settlers council, he heads an unlikely coalition of left-wing, right-wing, centrist and Arab parties. With consensus on Palestinian statehood virtually impossible within the diverse Israeli government, Biden and his aides are not expected to press Bennett for any major concessions toward the Palestinians in his first foreign visit. But even with little sign of US pressure to resume peace negotiations with the Palestinians that collapsed in 2014, Israel faces concern from Washington over its settlement activity in areas it captured in the 1967 Middle East war. The Biden administration has already made clear it opposes further expansion of Jewish settlements on occupied land Palestinians seek for a state. Most countries consider such settlements illegal. Israel disputes this. So far, Bennett, who has advocated annexation of parts of the West Bank, has moved cautiously on the settlement issue.
Scheduled approval last week of 2,200 new settler homes, along with 800 houses for Palestinians, was postponed, apparently to avoid dissonance with Washington ahead of his visit.But rising tensions and violence along the Israel-Gaza border, three months after an 11-day war between Israeli forces and Palestinian militants, could cast a shadow over Bennett’s trip. The trial is connected to the mass execution in July and August 1988 of political prisoners who were members or sympathizers of the armed leftwing group Mujahedin-e Khalq (MEK).
The defense has also pointed out that none of the witnesses have identified Noury as a member of the actual “death commission” tribunal, meaning he had no formal decision-making or sentencing powers. They deny Noury even worked at the prison. While such arguments carry weight in a court of law, the families of Noury’s alleged victims are in no doubt about his moral guilt. “He might have been a low-level operator,” Gobadi said. “But he was an integral part of the ruthless regime in Iran.”
Although only one individual is standing trial, the families of the victims of the secret executions understand the symbolic value of a successful prosecution and the possible knock-on effects. “What is unusual about this trial is that it’s most importantly an indictment of the entire Iranian regime, and that’s a huge problem for them,” Lewis, the plaintiffs’ lawyer, told Arab News. While Kristina Lindhoff Carleson, the lead prosecutor in the case, has ruled that there is sufficient evidence to charge Noury with only 100 killings, the sight of even one suspect being led into a courtroom in handcuffs is unprecedented.
During a court appearance last week, Noury complained that the protesters’ chants and slogans were “insulting,” forcing the judge to ask police to request the crowd outside to quieten down. (Photo by Ann Tornkvist) “This milestone trial in Sweden comes after decades of persistence by Iranian families and victims of the 1988 mass executions,” Balkees Jarrah, associate international justice director at Human Rights Watch (HRW), said in a statement. “This case moves victims closer to justice for the crimes committed more than 30 years ago.”
The trial is only possible in Sweden because the Nordic country recognizes universal jurisdiction over certain serious crimes such as mass murder, allowing for investigation and prosecution regardless of where the crimes were committed.
HRW has said that universal jurisdiction cases are important for ensuring that those who committed atrocities are held accountable. It says the process provides justice to victims who have nowhere else to turn, and that it deters future crimes by ensuring that countries do not become safe havens for rights abusers.
“Universal jurisdiction laws are a key tool against impunity for heinous crimes, especially when no other viable justice option exists,” Jarrah said. Members of the Swedish-Iranian community have told local media how proud they are to see authorities in their adopted home bring one of their tormentors to justice.
A verdict is expected in April 2022.


Israel Warns to Act if Needed 'to Prevent a Nuclear Iran'
Associated Press/August 25/2021
Israel's defense minister on Wednesday accused Iran of launching a deadly drone strike on an oil tanker last month from its territory and reiterated that Israel would act alone if needed to stop Iran from obtaining nuclear weapons. Benny Gantz spoke as Israeli Prime Minister Naftali Bennett was visiting Washington to discuss Iran with Biden administration officials during his first state visit in Washington. The Mercer Street, an oil tanker that was sailing in the Arabian Sea off Oman, was struck by a drone aircraft on July 29. The attack killed two, a British national and a Romanian. The tanker is managed by a firm owned by an Israeli billionaire. The United States, Britain and Israel have all blamed Iran for the drone strike on the Mercer Street, but no country has yet offered evidence or intelligence to support their claims. Iran has denied any wrongdoing. "Our assessment is that the UAV employed in the Mercer Street attack was launched from Iranian territory and approved by Iranian leadership," Gantz told foreign diplomats in a briefing. His remarks were released by his office. Gantz, a former Israeli army chief, has previously warned that Israel is prepared to take military action against Iran and called for international action to halt Iranian aggression. The two countries have been locked in a shadow war for years, which in recent months has taken a higher profile after a long string of attacks on merchant vessels. The attacks began after then-President Donald Trump unilaterally withdrew in 2018 from the nuclear deal between Iran and world powers, which saw Iran limit its enrichment of uranium in exchange for the lifting of economic sanctions. President Joe Biden has said he's willing to rejoin the accord, but talks over salvaging the deal have stalled in Vienna. Israel contends its regional archrival Iran seeks nuclear weapons, while Tehran insists its nuclear program is for peaceful purposes only. Gantz doubled down on those threats on Wednesday, saying that Israel "has the means to act and will not hesitate to do so – I do not rule out the possibility that Israel will have to take action in the future in order to prevent a nuclear Iran."

Afghan Resistance Leader Vows 'No Surrender'
AFP/August 25/2021
The leader of a resistance movement to the Taliban has vowed to never surrender but is open to negotiations with the new rulers of Afghanistan, according to an interview published by Paris Match on Wednesday. Ahmad Massoud, the son of legendary Afghan rebel commander Ahmad Shah Massoud, has retreated to his native Panjshir valley north of Kabul along with former vice-president Amrullah Saleh. "I would prefer to die than to surrender," Massoud told French philosopher Bernard-Henri Levy in his first interview since the Taliban took over Kabul. "I'm the son of Ahmad Chah Massoud. Surrender is not a word in my vocabulary."Massoud claimed that "thousands" of men were joining his National Resistance Front in Panjshir valley, which was never captured by invading Soviet forces in 1979 or the Taliban during their first period in power from 1996-2001. "I cannot forget the historic mistake made by those I was asking for weapons just eight days ago in Kabul," Massoud said, according to a transcript of the interview published in French. "They refused. And these weapons -- artillery, helicopters, American-made tanks -- are today in the hands of the Taliban," he said. Massoud added that he was open to talking to the Taliban and he laid out the outlines of a possible agreement. "We can talk. In all wars, there are talks. And my father always spoke with his enemies," he said.

China Describes "Effective" Talks with Taliban

Naharnet/August 25/2021
China says it has established an "open and effective communication and consultation with the Afghan Taliban," following a meeting between representatives of the group and Beijing's ambassador to Kabul. Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Wang Wenbin gave no details about the Tuesday meeting between the deputy head of the Taliban's political office, Abdul Salam Hanafi and Ambassador Wang Yu. But he said China considered Kabul to be an "important platform and channel for both sides to discuss important matters of all kinds."China hosted a delegation led by senior Taliban leader Mullah Abdul Ghani Baradar for talks last month, prior to the group's lightning sweep to power in Kabul. China has kept its embassy in the city open and says it has no plans for a wholesale evacuation of its citizens in Afghanistan, while relentlessly criticizing the U.S. over the chaotic scenes at Kabul airport.
"We have always respected Afghanistan's sovereign independence and territorial integrity, pursued a policy of non-interference in Afghanistan's internal affairs and adhered to a policy of friendship toward the entire Afghan people," Wang told reporters at a daily briefing Wednesday in Beijing.
"China respects the Afghan people's independent decision on their own future and destiny, supports the implementation of the Afghan-led and Afghan-owned principle, and stands ready to continue to develop good-neighborly relations of friendship and cooperation with Afghanistan and play a constructive role in the peace and reconstruction of the country," Wang said.
MORE ON AFGHANISTAN:
— Taliban insist on airlift deadline amid new report of abuses
— Biden decides to stick with Aug. 31 final pullout from Kabul
— G-7 grapples with Afghanistan, an afterthought not long ago
— UN rights chief warns of abuses amid Taliban's Afghan blitz
— Taliban takeover prompts fears of a resurgent al-Qaida
Find more AP coverage at https://apnews.com/hub/afghanistan
HERE'S WHAT ELSE IS HAPPENING:
VILNIUS, Lithuania — A plane carrying the first group of Afghan interpreters who had worked with Lithuanian forces in Afghanistan has touched down in the Baltic country. The Defense Ministry said Wednesday that a total of 50 people were flown from Kabul via Warsaw, Poland.
They are the first of 115 interpreters who worked with Lithuanian forces in Afghanistan from 2005 to 2013, and Lithuania plans to bring all of them out of the country. The second group is expected to land in Vilnius later in the day.
Meanwhile in Norway, two planes from Afghanistan with a total of 278 passengers landed in Oslo, Norwegian news agency NTB reported.
LONDON — Britain's foreign minister says he can't give a precise timeline about the end of U.K. evacuation flights from Afghanistan, but the mission will be over by Aug. 31. Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab said "it's clear that the troops will be withdrawn by the end of the month."U.S. President Joe Biden has rejected pressure from Britain and other allies to extend the evacuation operation, saying it will end on Aug. 31. There are almost 6,000 American troops at the airport helping people flee the Taliban, along with smaller military contingents from other countries. Raab said the British military will need time before the deadline to withdraw its people and equipment, but "we will make the maximum use of all the time we have left."He said British forces have airlifted 9,000 British citizens and at-risk Afghans from Kabul airport since the Taliban took the Afghan capital on Aug. 15.
MOSCOW -- Russia is preparing to evacuate more than 500 people on four military planes from Afghanistan — its first airlift operation since evacuations from Kabul began. The Defense Ministry said Wednesday that it will airlift the nationals of Russia, Belarus, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Uzbekistan and Ukraine from Kabul.Teams of medical workers will be present on each plane, the ministry said, should any of the evacuees require medical attention.The evacuations will be carried out upon orders of Russian President Vladimir Putin, the ministry noted.
KAMPALA, Uganda — Uganda's government says 51 people evacuated from Afghanistan have arrived in the East African country at the request of the United States. Authorities said in a statement that the group, transported to Uganda in a chartered flight, arrived early Wednesday. That statement said they included men, women and children. No more details were given on the identities of the evacuees. Ugandan officials said last week the country will shelter up to 2,000 people fleeing the Taliban's takeover of Afghanistan. They said the Afghans would be brought to Uganda in small groups in a temporary arrangement before they are relocated elsewhere.Uganda has long been a security ally of the U.S., especially on security matters in the region.
CANBERRA, Australia — Australia says it has helped evacuate 955 people in five flights from Kabul's airport overnight as the danger in Afghanistan increased. Defense Minister Peter Dutton on Wednesday thanked U.S., British and New Zealand defense forces for their help in evacuating 2,650 people including Afghan nationals from the airport since Wednesday last week. Tuesday was Australia's most successful day in evacuating people including Afghans who had worked for the Australian government. "There is more work to be done but, of course, we know the security threats on the ground continue to increase," Dutton told Parliament. The government would take the advice of the Australian Defense Force Chief Gen. Angus Campbell "as to how long it is possible for us to stay in country to keep our own people safe and help those that have helped us," Dutton added. Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison declined to comment on reports that up to 1,200 Afghans with Australian visas had been turned away from the airport.Dutton said Australia has resettled 8,500 Afghans who helped Australia in the past five years.
SEOUL, South Korea __ Seoul says about 380 people evacuated from Afghanistan will arrive in South Korea aboard military planes on Thursday. Choi Jongmoon, second vice foreign minister, told a briefing Wednesday that the Afghans are those who had worked for South Korea-run facilities in Afghanistan including its embassy or their family members. Choi says the government has decided to bring them to South Korea in consideration of "an ethical responsibility for our (Afghan) colleagues" and a responsibility as a member of the international community.
He says the Afghans will be sent to a government-run temporary accommodation facility upon their arrival in South Korea on Thursday.

Brazil detains two French travelers for perching atop iconic statue
AFP/August 25/2021
Brazilian authorities have detained two French men for watching the sun rise over Rio de Janeiro from the top of the iconic Christ the Redeemer statue while the monument was closed, one of the travelers told AFP. Clement Dumais, 28, and Paul Roux-dit-Buisson, 27, entered the site of the 38-meter (125-foot) monument Sunday night and stayed there after the statue was closed for the day. The two men snuck inside before dawn, climbed a long spiral staircase and came out through a hatch on one of the arms to enjoy the view of the city and Guanabara Bay. The statue's outstretched arms span 28 meters. The adventure ended when one of the security guards at the site noticed the men. "We were standing on the arms and the head and a security officer saw us," Roux-dit-Buisson told AFP. The two men were detained on Monday and released after posting 10,000 reais ($1,900) in bail. The two will now have to appear before a judge. Tourism police in Rio de Janeiro declined to comment, saying they were looking into the incident. Hailing from Paris, the two men have staged similar feats at iconic architectural sites in Dubai, New York, and Paris and documented their adventures on social media. Police have confiscated all the photos and videos the men made while on top of the Rio statue, but the travelers say they have no regrets. "The view was nice. Few people get a chance to see that," Roux-dit-Buisson said. "We were able to get inside the skin of Christ." The Christ the Redeemer statue, which will mark its 90th anniversary in October, was recently renovated with the help of professional climbers, who worked above the void in harnesses. In 1991 and in 2010, the statue was vandalized with graffiti. Along with the Sugarloaf Mountain, the iconic statue, located at the top of Corcovado Hill, is the most visited site in the tourist capital of Brazil, with nearly two million visits a year.

Dubai Confirms Arrest Of Italian Drug Lord

AFP/August 25/2021
Dubai authorities on Wednesday confirmed they have arrested one of Italy's most wanted international drug barons and his right-hand man, after years on the run.Raffaele Imperiale, considered to be one of Italy's most dangerous fugitives, was a top operative from the Naples organised crime world.

Algeria-Morocco crisis: Paris calls for “dialogue” in the interest of regional “stability”
AFP/August 25/2021
Paris on Wednesday called on Algeria, which broke off diplomatic relations with Morocco the day before, and its great neighboring rival to return to a logic of “dialogue“in the interest of”stabilityau Maghreb. “France naturally remains committed to deepening ties and dialogue between the countries of the region, in order to consolidate their stability and prosperity.“, said the deputy spokesman of the French Ministry of Foreign Affairs in a statement.

Attacker kills three police and security guard near French embassy in Tanzania
NNA/August 25/2021
An attacker wielding an assault rifle was shot dead after killing three police and an employee of a private security company near the French embassy in the Tanzanian capital Dar es Salaam on Wednesday, President Samia Suluhu Hassan said. Hassan said on Twitter that the attacker had been "neutralised" and "calm has returned". "I send my condolences to the police service and the families of three policemen, and one officer of the SGA security company, who lost their lives after an armed person attacked them in the Salenda area of Dar es Salaam," Hassan said in a tweet. Police gave no immediate details on the motive or target of the attacker. Video footage posted online, which could not immediately be verified, showed the gates of the French embassy in Dar es Salaam, a man outside of the gate, and the sounds of gunfire crackling.

Iran's parliament approves President Raisi's government: AFP
AFP/August 25/2021
Iran's parliament on Wednesday approved almost all President Ebrahim Raisi's cabinet choices in an open session, enabling him to form a government after he was inaugurated earlier this month.Lawmakers approved one-by-one 18 out of 19 candidates chosen by Raisi for the ministerial posts, rejecting only the pick for the education portfolio, thus requiring the president to make another choice for that post.

High blood pressure doubled globally in 30 years, study shows
AFP/August 25/2021
The number of people living with high blood pressure more than doubled since 1990, according to a major study published on Wednesday that found half of all sufferers -- about 720 million people -- went untreated in 2019. Hypertension is directly linked to more than 8.5 million deaths each year, and is the leading risk factor for stroke, heart and liver disease. To find out how rates of hypertension have developed globally over the past 30 years, an international team from Non-Communicable Disease Risk Factor Collaboration (NCD-RisC) analysed data from more than 1,200 national studies covering nearly every country in the world. They used modelling to estimate high blood pressure rates across populations, as well as the number of people taking medication for the condition. The analysis found that in 2019 there were 626 million women and 652 million men living with hypertension. This represented roughly double the estimated 331 million women and 317 million men with the condition in 1990. The analysis found that 41 percent of women and 51 percent of men with high blood pressure were unaware of their condition, meaning hundreds of millions of people were missing out on effective treatment. "Despite medical and pharmacological advances over decades, global progress in hypertension management has been slow, and the vast majority of people with hypertension remain untreated," said Majid Ezzati from Imperial College London and senior study author.

Oil Spill from Power Station Spreads along Syria's Coast
Associated Press/August 25/2021
A massive oil spill caused by leakage from a power plant inside one of Syria's oil refineries is spreading along the coast of the Mediterranean country, Syria's state news agency said and satellite photos showed Wednesday. SANA said the spill reached the coastal town of Jableh, about 20 kilometers (12 miles) north of the refinery in the town of Baniyas, adding that Syria's environment department and the municipality of the coastal province of Latakia have placed all concerned departments on alert. It said work is underway to clean the coast in the rocky areas. A day earlier, Syria's government said that maintenance teams at Baniyas Thermal Station had brought a fuel leakage from one of the tanks under control. Satellite images from Planet Labs Inc. on Wednesday showed what appeared to be a massive oil spill stretching out over 25.5 square kilometers. An image from Monday showed no sign of the slick, suggesting whatever happened to cause the spill happened later. The head of the Electricity Workers Syndicate at Tartous Workers Union, Dawoud Darwish, blamed cracks in one of the fuel tanks at the thermal station. He pointed out that the tank was filled with 15,000 tons of fuel. Syria's oil resources are mostly outside of government controlled areas but its two refineries are under government control and operating. This makes Damascus reliant on Iran for fuel, but U.S. Treasury sanctions have hindered the supply network, which spans Syria, Iran and Russia. There has been a series of mysterious attacks on vessels in Mideast waters, including off Syria's coast, for over a year. They have come amid rising tensions in the region between Iran, Israel and the United States. In May, Syria's foreign minister blamed Israel for mysterious attacks targeting oil tankers heading to Syria, saying they violate international law and will not go unpunished.

Morocco rejects Algeria’s decision to sever ties as ‘completely unjustifiable’

The Arab Weekly/August 25/2021
ALGIERS--Morocco has rejected Algeria’s decision to sever ties with the kingdom as “completely unjustifiable” but pledged to continue acting as “a loyal partner of the Algerian people.”“Algeria has decided to cut diplomatic relations with the kingdom of Morocco from today,” Algeria’s Foreign Minister Ramtane Lamamra announced during a press conference in Algiers, Tuesday, citing “hostile actions” by Rabat as the reason of the decision. In response, the Moroccan ministry of foreign affairs said, “it regrets this completely unjustified but expected decision, in view of the logic of escalation noted in recent weeks, as well as its impact on the Algerian people.”It also rejected “the fallacious, even absurd, pretexts underlying” the move. Maghreb analysts described Algeria’s severing of diplomatic relations with Morocco as a reflection of its refusal to accept regional changes and its insistence on squandering opportunities for cooperation and better relations with Morocco, despite the many overtures from King Mohammed VI. Late last month, Morocco’s king deplored the tensions between the two countries and invited Algeria’s President Abdelmadjid Tebboune “to make wisdom prevail” and “to work in unison for the development of relations” between the two countries. The analysts accused Algeria of choosing escalation following the decision of the US to recognise Moroccan sovereignty over the Western Sahara, with the latest ratcheting being the unsubstantiated accusations that Morocco was behind the forest fires in the Kabyle region.
Algeria’s fires, which broke out on August 9 amid a blistering heatwave, burned tens of thousands of hectares of trees and killed at least 90 people, including more than 30 soldiers, further stoking tensions. The Algerian authorities found themselves in a tough predicament at home as they faced mounting criticism over their failure to prepare for the blazes, though Tebboune declared that most of the fires were of “criminal” origin. Forest fires have broken out in more than one Mediterranean country, as Turkey, Greece, Lebanon and Tunisia all suffered from the same disasters, which is likely linked to climate change. Ramtane Lamamra reiterated the Algerian presidency’s accusation of “Rabat’s involvement in the recent wave of fires that the country has experienced and in the horrific crime that killed the young volunteer, Jamal Ibn Ismail.”
He also accused Rabat of “embracing the two terrorist organisations, the Kabyle Independence Movement (MAC) and the Rachad Movement,” which Algiers alleges were behind the fires. “The Moroccan provocation reached its climax when a Moroccan delegate to the United Nations demanded the independence of the people of the Kabylie region,” Lamamra said, adding that Algeria waited for the Moroccan leadership to provide it with an explanation on the issue if (that) was an isolated act or an official position.” However, he said, “the silence of Morocco since the middle of last July has suggested that the aforementioned endeavour is a Moroccan position.”Last month, Algeria recalled its ambassador to Rabat for consultations over allegations that Morocco’s envoy to the United Nations, Omar Hilale, voiced support for self-determination in Kabylie. Some analysts link the Algerian response to Morocco’s mounting diplomatic and political successes in recent years, the latest of which was the recognition by the United States and a number of Gulf countries of its sovereignty over the Western Sahara. “The Algerian move falls within a natural context adopted by the regime in Algiers, which believes that escalation with Morocco can help it overcome its deep internal crisis,” Lebanese political analyst Khairallah Khairallah said. Khairallah added that the Algerian decision meant “the rejection of Morocco’s outstretched hand” and was evidence of “the bankruptcy of a regime that does not know that its first problem is with its people and not with Morocco.”Ramtane Lamamra also said that the final decision over the contract related to the Algerian gas pipeline transiting Morocco to Spain is subject to international arbitration and agreements and that Sonatrach, which owns the pipeline, is the decision-maker over the renewal or termination of the contract in the near future.There were conflicting accounts in the two capitals over the fate of the agreement concluded between the two countries on the gas pipeline, which expires at the end of this year. Algeria’s foreign minister also accused Morocco of leading “a media war … against Algeria, its people and its leaders”. He accused Morocco’s government of “responsibility for repeated crises” and behaviour that has “led to conflict instead of integration” in North Africa. But Lamamra also said consular assistance to citizens of both countries would not be affected. The Moroccan foreign ministry has pledged that the kingdom “will remain a credible and loyal partner for the Algerian people and will continue to act, with wisdom and responsibility, for the development of healthy and fruitful inter-Maghreb relations.”

Saudi-Russian defence agreement reflects Riyadh’s diversification drive
The Arab Weekly/August 25/2021
MOSCOW--Saudi Arabia and Russia took a further step towards developing their military cooperation by signing a defence deal on Monday. The deal came at a time when diversification of international partners is of increasing importance to the kingdom in light of the growing disengagement from the region of Riyadh’s historic ally, the United States and Washington’s retreat from its commitments towards its traditional partners. The agreement was signed on the sidelines of a meeting in Moscow between Saudi Deputy Defence Minister Prince Khalid bin Salman and Russian Defence Minister Sergey Shoygu. “I signed an agreement with the Russian Deputy Minister of Defence Colonel General Alexander Fomin between the Kingdom and the Russian Federation aimed at developing joint military cooperation between the two countries,” tweeted Prince Khalid. Prince Khalid and Shoygu had met earlier to “explore ways to strengthen the military and defence cooperation” between Riyadh and Moscow. “We discussed our common endeavour to preserve stability and security in the region and reviewed shared challenges facing our countries,” Prince Khalid wrote in another tweet. According to followers of Saudi affairs, the kingdom’s move towards Russia and other world powers, at this particular juncture, along with the signing of the defence agreement, carry a clear message to the US that other powers are ready to fill the void created by Washington’s Middle East retreat and that the relationship with Saudi Arabia is not to be taken for granted. Riyadh has been a leading customer of the US defence industry. It is considered the largest importer of American weapons with almost a quarter of total US arms exports going to Saudi Arabia, according to the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute. The Saudi Deputy Defence Minister’s Moscow visit came as part of his trip to the International Military-Technical Forum “Army 2021”. During the meeting with Shoygu, Prince Khalid talked of the kingdom’s readiness to “continue to strengthen the historically-developed relations between our two countries,” adding, according to the Russian Sputnik agency, “I am confident that in the future we will continue to develop and strengthen these relations and achieve the aspirations of our peoples.” This, he said, would have a beneficial impact on “stability and security.”According to the Saudi Deputy Defence Minister, the existing cooperation between his country and Russia “will contribute to formulating a joint response to all modern challenges that we will undertake to meet together,” noting that “the existing challenges will require greater cooperation and effort on our part.”The Army 21 forum is held from August 22 to 28 in the city of Kubinka, on the outskirts of the Russian capital, Moscow. Saudi Arabia and Russia are major partners in the oil sector and together during last year’s market turmoil and price collapse, played a decisive role in restoring balance to markets and adjusting prices,. In the light of the Saudi foreign policy aimed at diversifying Riyadh’s partners, the kingdom’s relations with Russia have seen qualitative leaps in recent years culminating in King Salman bin Abdulaziz’s first visit to Moscow in the fall of 2017. Saudi Arabia’s determination to widen it international relationships seem stronger today than ever, after the US policy shifts signalled by President Joe Biden. The US administration fuelled Arab Gulf concerns with its move to accommodate Iran and its failure to heed Saudi concerns, as demonstrated a few months ago by the decision to withdraw military equipment, including Patriot missile batteries, from the kingdom and other countries in the region. The US move was announced while the kingdom faced the threat of ballistic missiles and drones that Iran supplies to its Houthi proxies in Yemen. Military and defence experts say that the decision to withdraw the Patriot batteries may have motivated the Saudis to search for Russian alternatives.
Saudi and Russian sources had previously revealed in February 2018 that “advanced” negotiations were underway to sell the kingdom Russian S-400 air defence systems.

Cyprus to revoke passports of Turkish Cypriot officials
The Arab Weekly/August 25/2021
NICOSIA--Cyprus said it would revoke passports issued to Turkish Cypriot officials in the breakaway north of the island over their “hostile” actions.
Government spokesman Marios Pelekanos did not specify which officials were being targeted, but said the decision was linked to Turkish and Turkish Cypriot plans to open up the ghost town of Varosha. Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan and Turkish Cypriot leader Ersin Tatar said last month they would reopen part of the former resort, abandoned since Ankara’s 1974 invasion of the island. “The cabinet decided to revoke, not renew or issue Republic of Cyprus passports to a number of persons who either participate in the pseudo-state’s cabinet or are members of the Varosha opening committee,” Pelekanos said Monday. The actions of these officials “undermine the sovereignty, independence, territorial integrity and security of the Republic of Cyprus,” he said. The present Cypriot administration, which made billions selling passports to thousands of people ranging from Russian oligarchs and a Malaysian fugitive to well-connected Cambodians, said the actions of the Turkish Cypriots targeted undermined the integrity of Cyprus. The official Cyprus News Agency said 14 passports would be revoked, ten held by cabinet members and four by members of the Varosha committee.
“Their specific hostile actions against the Republic of Cyprus promote the implementation of Turkey’s plans to change the status of Varosha, contrary to United Nations resolutions,” Pelekanos added. Turkish Cypriot authorities in July announced a partial reopening of the beach suburb of Varosha for potential resettlement, but it brought a strong rebuke from Greek Cypriots who regard it as a land-grab. For decades, the area has been a Turkish military zone with no settlement permitted. Turkish troops seized the northern third of Cyprus in 1974 in response to an aborted coup in Nicosia aiming at uniting the island with Greece. The Republic of Cyprus, whose overwhelming majority is Greek Cypriot and which has been a European Union member since 2004, has effective control over the southern two-thirds of the island. Only Ankara recognises the breakaway self-declared Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus (TRNC). Turkish Cypriots are eligible for a Republic of Cyprus identity card and passport, which allows them free access to the EU. Media reports said that Tatar obtained a passport in 2000 but that he never used it and would happily return it. The EU has told Turkey to reverse plans to open up Varosha. In July, the 27-nation bloc condemned “Turkey’s unilateral steps and the unacceptable announcements”. It is estimated that more than 100,000 Turkish Cypriots hold either a Republic of Cyprus ID card or passport, as is their birthright based on the common state established with Greek Cypriots in 1960.
The Communist AKEL, the main Greek Cypriot opposition party, said the passport decision was for domestic consumption only and that authorities should focus on initiatives to “arrest the partiVaroshationist designs of Turkey”. However, Erato Kozakou Marcoullis, a former Cypriot foreign minister and long-time diplomat, roundly condemned the Cypriot government’s move. He tweeted: “(A) Short-sighted and impulsive policy! They are removing the only element of proof that ‘officials’ of the Turkey-subordinate regime do recognise the Republic of Cyprus.”Local media have reported that Tatar, a strong proponent of Turkish Cypriot independence, obtained a Cypriot passport in 2000. He is the son of a prominent technocrat who acted as an adviser in talks leading to the establishment of the Republic of Cyprus in 1960 after independence from Britain.

The Latest LCCC English analysis & editorials published on August 25-26/2021
Act Now to Save and Learn the Lessons of the Afghan War
Anthony H. Cordesman/CSIS/August 25/2021
It will be all too easy to lurch from crisis to crisis in leading with the collapse of Afghanistan and its aftermath. It will be all the more easy to fail at preserving the data and institutions necessary to learn as much from that collapse as possible. The U.S. made this mistake in dealing with its first withdrawal from Iraq. It let the Special Inspector General for Iraq Reconstruction (SIGIR) collapse, did not create any official independent body to replace SIGIR to learn from the war, let much of the official open source data disappear from the web, and never established a process for declassifying masses of key data that would have helped analysts and historians learn the right lessons with as much information as possible.
The U.S. made equally serious mistakes in learning from the first Gulf War. It rushed out a report to Congress called the Conduct of The Persian Gulf War: Final Report to Congress that grossly exaggerated the level of success in using airpower, understated the problems in creating an effective coalition, did not address the serious intelligence and policy mistakes that led to premature conflict termination without the proper conditions, failed to address the legacy and relevant lessons of the Iran-Iraq War, and failed to examine the post-conflict costs of failing to have an effective plan for conflict termination. Some excellent studies have since been written by outside analysts, and separate efforts by bodies like the U.S. Air Force Studies and Analyses Agency (AFSAA) have corrected many of the mistakes in the first official report, but much of the data and facts have been lost.
The U.S. also largely failed to provide a timely analysis of the lessons of the Vietnam War, although outside historians and analysts have since written some excellent work, and the later volumes of the 33 volumes in the U.S. Army’s official history of the Vietnam War did cover many key areas in depth. Jeffrey J. Clarke’s Advice and Support: The Final Years, 1965-1973 should have been required reading for every officer and official going to both Iraq and Afghanistan, although it clearly suffered from a lack of full access to sensitive data that never became public after the war.
The U.S. should not repeat these mistakes in the case of the Afghan War, and this time it maintains a body capable with all of the expertise, objectivity, and practical contacts it needs to do the job efficiently, handle sensitive and classified data securely, and take a “whole of government” approach that will ensure that there is a proper focus on both the civil and military lessons of the conflict.
The Special Inspector General for Afghanistan Reconstruction (SIGAR) has already addressed many of the lessons that should be learned from the war. It has experienced experts that have already worked in the field, and it has shown it can work well with both military personnel in the field and with think tanks in Washington. Equally important, it has demonstrated that it really is non-partisan in a Washington where partisanship is all too common and campaigning for the 2022 mid-term election has already begun.
Furthermore, SIGAR has focused on the costs of war in terms of money and casualties, not just policy and strategy in the broad sense. It has examined the problems in train and assist efforts for the Afghan military as well the problems in civil aid efforts and the impact of Afghan internal politics and corruption. It has already worked with classified data on the growth of Taliban forces down to the local level and on the full impact of the shifts and cuts in U.S. and foreign military, civilian, and contractor personnel.
This is critical in handling the level of detail necessary to fully address the practical lessons from the war. Outside experts have already issued at least two important books on the war: Carter Malkasian’s The American War in Afghanistan: A History and Craig Whitlock’s The Afghanistan Papers, and there are certain to be many more. Some of the most important lessons, however, will address individual areas of federal spending, the timing and reasons for shifts in military civilian projects and personnel, the details of the changing train and assist efforts, the need for managing the flow of aid and making it conditional, and a long list of other areas where SIGAR has already shown that a detailed analysis of lessons is necessary and where it often could not address the details because the Afghan government insisted that key data would not be made available.
Most importantly, SIGAR has also shown consistently that it has no partisan edge, no political or ideological biases, and no institutional biases or reluctance to discuss difficult decisions and bureaucratic failures. It is an organization which – unlike so many study groups and commissions – has proven its ability to be objective and deal with the uncertainty of so many aspects of complex warfighting decision-making.
To succeed, however, SIGAR’s mandate has to be extended almost immediately, along with its authority to collect key data, keep experienced personnel, and have full access on an interagency level. Congress needs to change SIGAR’s mandate, give it at least two more years to work through the lesson process, and avoid pressing it for instant answers in the many areas where data need to be verified and conflicting views need to be addressed.
Congress also needs to fully understand that the cost of learning the right lessons from this war will be negligible compared to the cost of failing to learn. Important as China and Russia may be, the U.S. will still face many more struggles against terrorism, irregular warfare, and insurgencies. It will still have to deal with a world where at least 20% of the countries are now fragile states, and where the U.S. must find the right path to a real “whole of government” approach and adequate contingency planning.
This commentary, entitled, Act Now to Save and Learn the Lessons of the Afghan War, is available for download at https://csis-website-prod.s3.amazonaws.com/s3fs-public/publication/210823_Cordesman_Save_Learn.pdf?fMCSm3V4Zxi9yABpIEdG5HAloDdLuxIl
*Anthony H. Cordesman holds the Arleigh A. Burke Chair in Strategy at the Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington, D.C. He has served as a consultant on Afghanistan to the United States Department of Defense and the United States Department of State.
Commentary is produced by the Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS), a private, tax-exempt institution focusing on international public policy issues. Its research is nonpartisan and nonproprietary. CSIS does not take specific policy positions. Accordingly, all views, positions, and conclusions expressed in this publication should be understood to be solely those of the author(s).
© 2021 by the Center for Strategic and International Studies. All rights reserved.

How American Weapons Find Their Way to International Criminal Organizations

Emanuele Ottolenghi/The Dispatch-FDD/August 25/2021
It’s a complex problem that won’t be solved by Mexico’s lawsuit against U.S. manufacturers.
Earlier this month, the Mexican government filed an unprecedented lawsuit against U.S. gun manufacturers. The claim: Manufacturers are negligent in their sales and bear responsibility for the flow of weapons across the U.S.-Mexican border. Those weapons, they say, arm the cartels and contribute to the skyrocketing number of violent deaths—17,000 last year alone. Not surprisingly, the manufacturers reject such claims. They say they strictly follow American law. They argue that the porous nature of the border and the corruption of officials on the Mexican side are the problem.
The manufacturers are right on both counts. But the flow of illicit weapons south of the U.S. border is not Mexico’s fault alone. Guns in America are sold, by and large, by the book. But organized crime elements have found ways to purchase large quantities of weapons on the U.S. market legally through illicit actors who take advantage of insufficient custom controls, corrupt border officials, and freight companies that dispatch entire armories to Central and South America for the benefit of criminal syndicates and violent gangs. This happens despite a U.S. Supreme Court ruling last year banning straw purchases—guns bought on others’ behalf.
Two years ago, a joint international police operation nicknamed Patagonia Express exposed and dismantled a fraudulent scheme to ship weapons to criminal organizations in Argentina and Brazil. During the operation, U.S., Argentinian. and Brazilian law enforcement arrested 25 people and seized thousands of weapons. Among the arrested: an elderly couple from South Florida, who bought weapons locally, disassembled them, and then sent their components to Argentina in mislabeled shipments through the U.S. Postal Service.
Patagonia Express uncovered not only a scheme but also a method. A similar case involved a small Paraguayan import company, Paco Internacional, currently being prosecuted in Paraguay. In March 2016, local authorities inspected a container, just arrived from Miami, that included merchandise labeled as electronics. Inspectors found weapon parts instead. It took five years to mount a case against the recipient of the weapons Paco was importing into Paraguay. Officials today believe the buyer was a local businessman suspected of being involved in organized crime. Paraguayan prosecution documents allege that he bought the weapons online from U.S. suppliers and had them shipped to a Florida address. The freight forwarder and its Florida-based counterpart did the rest.
In the Paco Internacional case, the online purchase of weapons underscores how easy it can be for criminals to procure weapons in the U.S. if they have accomplices. The U.S. sellers did not violate the law: They shipped their products to a U.S. address. And given the small number of arms involved, the case hardly seems worth highlighting as a problem here in the United States.
However, the role of local facilitators for criminal networks should not be ignored. The Miami-based freight company that sent the weapons to Paco belonged to a Brazilian national who was arrested in Brazil in 2017 for contraband. Paco also traded with other South Florida-based companies implicated in a suspected Hezbollah trade-based money laundering scheme that is today being prosecuted in Miami. Indeed, organized crime often looks to U.S. based facilitators with an eye toward circumventing the holes in our legal system.
Criminal syndicates find it easier (and possibly cheaper) to buy weapons legally in the U.S. market because there are American intermediaries who are willing to break the law by exporting them under false documentation. In other words, there may be negligence and even corruption at the border, but there is also a systemic problem here at home.
The volume and type of weapons seized over the years suggests that the Mexican government is not entirely wrong to look at America as a source of weapons for the cartels. However, it appears that the negligence alleged may be less with manufacturers and more with gun stores. Similarly, blaming border control for the problem may also fail to help. Intermediaries can circumvent the border altogether with these schemes.
This does not absolve America from wrestling with the broader problem of American weapons finding their way into the hands of international criminal organizations, and the devastating long-term consequences for societies in the southern hemisphere this trafficking begets. What happens there does not stay there, either. Immigrants fleeing the violence south of our border continue to pose policy challenges here.
Even if the Mexican legal complaint is dismissed, American policymakers must independently take action to stem the illicit flow of deadly weapons to transnational organized crime. This may require states to institute more stringent controls on internet sales of weapons and other measures to reduce straw purchases and ensure that buyers are not stockpiling weapons with a view to illicit transfers, as the Patagonia Express case shows. It will also require the federal government to strengthen monitoring of commercial shipments at ports and postal shipments. The U.S. cannot solve the plague of public officials’ corruption south of its border. But it can make sure that criminals do not exploit our constitutional freedoms to foment violence abroad.
*Emanuele Ottolenghi is a senior fellow at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies, a nonpartisan think tank in Washington, D.C. Follow him on Twitter @eottolenghi.

Afghanistan's Christians are turning off phones and going into hiding
Kelsey Zorzi/The Hill/August 25/2021
With the Taliban’s takeover of Afghanistan, governments around the world are frantically making plans to rescue as many at risk Afghans as they can. Germany, which has vowed to evacuate as many as 10,000, and the United Kingdom are currently coordinating with civil society partners to determine who is most in need of rescue and how they can be located and evacuated.
India announced last week that it will prioritize evacuating Hindus and Sikhs, two religious minorities that have already neared extinction in Afghanistan due to the Taliban’s brutal rule 20 years ago.
Canada has expressed a willingness to grant visas to religious minorities whose lives are presumed endangered under the Taliban. Among the country’s most vulnerable minorities are Christians. But the Christian community is becoming increasingly difficult to track down. And fears are growing that, for many, it’s too late and there’s no way out.
Afghanistan’s Christians are estimated to number between 10,000 and 12,000. The vast majority of them are converts from Islam to Christianity. For decades they have largely practiced their faith underground, as conversion is considered a crime punishable by death under Sharia Law.
Yet, since the Taliban’s fall in 2001, the Christian community has not only been growing, it has become emboldened, in part because of the modicum of security leant by the U.S. presence on the ground. In 2019, as the number of children born to converts grew, dozens of Afghan Christians decided to include their religious affiliation on their national identity cards so that future generations wouldn’t have to hide their faith. Only about 30 Christians successfully made this change before the Taliban’s takeover this week.
Now the United States’ highly criticized withdrawal has left Afghan Christians with no choice but to join those who cooperated with the U.S. and Afghan governments in attempting to hide. The memories of public executions, floggings and amputations of Christians and other religious minorities under the Taliban’s previous rule remain vivid. As the Taliban is reportedly already working to track down the known Christians on its list, some local church leaders are counseling their communities to stay inside their homes, even though they know the best and perhaps only long-term hope is to somehow flee the country. Other Christians are reportedly escaping to the hills in attempts to find safety.
Some Christians on the ground have expressed that, with the takeover of Kabul, they expect to be killed, mafia-style. Although some reports say that the Taliban is already conducting targeted killings of Christians and other minorities found using public transportation, as well as executing anyone found with Bible software installed on their cell phones.
Christians also fear for the safety of their children, with the Taliban already publicizing plans to “eradicate the ignorance of irreligion” by taking non-Muslim women and girls as sex slaves and forcing boys to serve as soldiers.
Without any clear plan from the United States to evacuate Afghans under special threat, not to mention the remaining thousands of American citizens, Afghan Christians and many other religious minority groups are stranded. They know the Taliban is seeking them. Christians in hiding have already reported receiving threatening letters or phone calls saying, “We know where you are and what you are doing.” Without knowing how sophisticated the Taliban’s tracking capabilities are, Christians are turning off their phones to avoid surveillance and have started moving to undisclosed locations.
Further complicating any plans to rescue Afghanistan’s vulnerable minorities is the fact that many of them are without passports. It is estimated by locals that only 20-30 percent of the known Christian community have passports. Without passports, it is currently unclear whether any foreign country would accept them, were they able to get out.
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Several European government officials are currently discussing the possibility of overlooking immigration documentation requirements for those individuals whose identities and vulnerability status can be verified by civil society groups. But until countries confirm and announce that they are willing to waive passport and visa requirements, many Afghan Christians are unwilling to risk the increasingly perilous journey through Taliban checkpoints to the airport. And, currently, a passport and safe arrival at the airport aren’t even enough; the few passport holding Christians who have reached the airport have not yet been able to leave the country.
With phones off, many Christians will be difficult to contact or locate for rescue, in the event that the American government finally takes direct action to correct some of the worst fallout from its disastrous withdrawal. While the U.S. and the international community must start doing everything in their power to help the most vulnerable, time is quickly running out.
*Kelsey Zorzi is president of the U.N.’s NGO Committee on Freedom of Religion or Belief and director of advocacy for global religious freedom for ADF International. Her writings have appeared in several outlets including the Wall Street Journal, Newsweek, and RealClear. Twitter: @KelseyZorzi.

Azerbaijani support underpins Turkey’s ambitions in South Caucasus
The Arab Weekly/August 25/2021
Turkey is bolstering defence cooperation with Azerbaijan as it seeks to double down on the military success of last year’s war between Azerbaijan and Armenia. As skirmishes along the Armenian-Azerbaijan border increased in recent weeks, there was even speculation that Turkey was on the brink of forging a joint military force with Baku. Turkey helped Azerbaijan come out on top of the six-week conflict over the Nagorno-Karabakh region and it wants to capitalise by further boosting its influence in the South Caucasus.
Under president Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP), Turkey has made no secret of its thirst for a grander role in swathes of the Arab Middle East, Libya and the Eastern Mediterranean. But if it pushes too far in the Caucasus, it risks antagonising Russia, which views the region as its own historical backyard. Symbolised by the popular motto of “one nation, two states,” Turkey and Azerbaijan have held a close bond since Baku declared independence in 1991. The countries are predominantly Muslim, share ethnic and cultural similarities and are linked by strong economic interests.
A chronic, shared concern between the two is thwarting the regional ambitions of Armenia. Turkey and Armenia have no diplomatic relations and a history of hostility that dates back a century.
Ties between Ankara and Baku grew deeper after Turkey threw its support behind Azerbaijan during last year’s conflict. Ankara supplied Azeri forces with armed Bayraktar TB2 drones that were used to devastating effect against Armenian troops.
The war ended with a Russian-brokered deal in November and resulted in Baku’s military victory over several cities and nearly 300 settlements and villages. At least 5,000 soldiers and more than 140 civilians were killed in the fighting, which also displaced tens of thousands of people. The outcome delivered a blow to Armenia’s claims to the region that span nearly three decades.
In signs that tensions are far from over, there have been pockets of fighting along the Armenia-Azerbaijan border over the past few weeks. On August 1, the Azeri defence ministry said Armenian army elements targeted its positions and Baku responded with retaliatory fire. In early August, at least three Armenian troops died and two Azeri soldiers were wounded in clashes in Azerbaijan’s Kalbajar district. All this may have fuelled reports in the Turkish media that a joint Azerbaijan-Turkey force was imminent. The speculation was later rowed back, after it turned out the source of the confusion was a poor translation of a statement by Turkish parliament speaker Mustafa Sentop at the signing ceremony of the Baku Declaration on July 28 between Turkey, Azerbaijan and Pakistan. But the prospect of a joint army had seemed plausible given that military cooperation between Ankara and Baku has steadily grown since the conflict.
Ankara is adamant that it cannot lose influence over the Nagorno-Karabakh settlement and is looking to enhance its caretaker role in the South Caucasus. In late June, the Turkish and Azeri militaries conducted joint drills in Baku that involved military personnel, tanks and drones. Similar bilateral exercises were held last year, made possible by a 2010 agreement that mandates cooperation when either country faces aggression from a third state or group of states.
Turkey and Azerbaijan signed the Shusha Declaration in July, named after the city in the Nagorno-Karabakh region that Azerbaijan now controls, affirming a joint commitment to defence cooperation, stability and prosperity in the region. A central concern lies with restructuring and modernising their armed forces.
Rumours that Turkey may be planning a military base in Azerbaijan are cause for concern for Russia, which has its own base in Armenia. Moscow has deployed 2,000 peacekeepers to the region and wants to maintain a monopoly over the balance of power there. On July 20, president Ilham Aliyev of Azerbaijan met Vladimir Putin in Moscow for the second time this year to discuss the post-war peace agreement and a way forward.
Russia is not the only one with an interest in how the Azerbaijan-Armenia ceasefire deal plays out. Brussels seeks the revival of the Minsk Group under the auspices of the Organisation for Security and Cooperation in Europe, paving the way for the US and France (as Minsk co-chairs) to take on a larger mediating role. From their perspective, the conflict has not been resolved once and for all. European Council President Charles Michel said in July during a visit to Yerevan that “the status of Nagorno-Karabakh must also be addressed.” For years, Azerbaijan expressed frustration with the stalled Minsk process and is not keen to assign it any significant role in the border demarcation process with Armenia. In recent years, Turkish foreign policy has prioritised the creation of a medley of regional organisations, pacts and local summits as potential counterweights to established Western multilateral organisations and powerhouses like Russia and Iran. For example, the recent trilateral agreement with Pakistan and Azerbaijan or reports earlier this year of reviving Turkey-Israel relations through Azeri mediation. Turkey recently hinted at a new six-state platform to support peace in the Caucasus that would include Turkey, Azerbaijan, Russia, Iran, Georgia and Armenia. Turkey is keen to sign off on a success story in its otherwise rancorous foreign policy-making and amid its domestic economic woes and plummeting currency.
But against the backdrop of a burgeoning bilateral military pact between Ankara and Baku, Russia and neighbouring states are hesitant to buy in to its rhetoric on regional cooperation. Peripheral states have always managed their relationship with Russia carefully, wary of the consequences of a misstep. While Turkey tries to tinker with the regional balance of power, it is unclear just how much it can achieve beyond its safe-bet alliance with Azerbaijan.
Syndication Bureau: www.syndicationbureau.com
*Burcu Ozcelik is a research fellow and affiliated lecturer at Cambridge University.

A trial in Sweden raises uncomfortable questions about Iranian regime’s past
Ann Torknkvist/Arab News/August 25/2021
STOCKHOLM: The Stockholm District Court’s thick stone walls could not keep out the sounds of protest. Since the trial of Hamid Noury, 60, began on Aug. 10, Swedish Iranians have gathered daily outside the century-old court building to draw the world’s attention to his alleged crimes.
During a court appearance last week, Noury complained that the protesters’ chants and slogans were “insulting,” forcing the judge to ask police to request the crowd outside to quieten down.
The trial is connected to the mass execution in July and August 1988 of political prisoners who were members or sympathizers of the armed leftwing group Mujahedin-e Khalq (MEK), also known as the People’s Mujahedin Organization of Iran. As an alleged assistant to one of the special-tribunal prosecutors, Noury is said to have been a key actor in the executions at Gohardasht prison, a facility on the northern outskirts of Karaj, about 20 km west of the capital Tehran.
The prosecution says that Noury facilitated death sentences, sent prisoners to execution and helped prosecutors gather prisoners’ names. He has denied all of the charges while claiming that the sentences were justified because of a fatwa, or religious ruling, by Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, Iran’s supreme leader at the time. The fatwa, issued in 1988, targeted the MEK, which had been outlawed by the Islamic regime in 1981 and held responsible for a series of anti-regime attacks at the end of the 1980-88 Iran-Iraq War. The MEK had been operating since 1986 from Iraq, then ruled by Iran’s archfoe Saddam Hussein.
The families of the victims of the executions have waited three decades for justice. Now, after a complex Swedish police investigation into the suspected murders of political prisoners, they could soon find a measure of closure.
Survivors of the anti-MEK purge have testified that several inmates already had the hangman’s noose around their necks when Noury led them down what was known among prisoners as a “death corridor,” to await their hearing.
Noury is alleged to have read out the names of those who would face the specially appointed tribunal, which had likewise been nicknamed “the death commission.” Few renounced their allegiance to the MEK, so few ended up avoiding the death penalty.
“It was a kangaroo court where the so-called trial took one to two minutes,” Shahin Gobadi, a spokesman for the MEK-affiliated National Council of Resistance of Iran, told Arab News while participating in a protest last week outside the Stockholm District Court by exiled Iranians, former political prisoners and families of victims of the secret executions. Gobadi added: “Noury served pastries to the judges on the ‘death commission’ and to the prison guards to celebrate a ‘good day’s work’.”
In one witness statement, Noury was described as “particularly cold-blooded” compared with other officials involved in a veritable industrial production-line killing system. Activists managed to lure Noury to Scandinavia with a bogus offer of a luxury cruise, before tipping off local police about his scheduled arrival. Since his arrest at Stockholm airport in November 2019, the case against him has expanded.
Kenneth Lewis, representing several of the plaintiffs, told the court that although 500 to 600 prisoners were known to have died at Gohardasht within the space of a few weeks, this was merely one of several prisons where executions were taking place.
A 2018 report by human rights monitor Amnesty International, “Blood-Soaked Secrets: Why Iran’s 1988 prison massacres are ongoing crimes against humanity,” places the death toll in regime jails at about 5,000.
In the wider crackdown, which was not reserved to the prisons, an estimated 30,000 Iranian dissidents are thought to have been killed. Lewis pointed out that this toll far exceeds other well-known atrocities, including Srebrenica in Bosnia.
“It is my belief, however, that the motive, not the numbers, define genocide,” Lewis told the court in his opening statement. Indeed, Khomeini’s son and right-hand man Ahmad Khomeini is alleged to have argued strongly in favor of the fatwa at issue, saying it was time to “exterminate” the MEK in retaliation for its anti-regime activities.“It is our view that these executions constitute genocide because the fatwa was issued with the purpose of exterminating the (MEK) based on the (regime’s) religious opinion,” Lewis said.
Ali Doustkam, who fled to Sweden in 1994 and has attended the protests in Stockholm, says that the trauma of the 1988 fatwa persists despite the passage of time. “The prisoners who were executed were discarded in mass graves. Their families have not been able to bury them to this day,” Doustkam told Arab News. According to him, suspected MEK members eliminated by the regime outside the prison system were also treated with the same disrespect in death. Branded enemies of God, they were denied the right to burial in communal cemeteries among the devout. “Parents were forced to bury their children in their backyard,” Doustkam said.In Gobadi’s view, the Iranian “government of mass murderers” has not only avoided accountability for its actions, but has rewarded its functionaries for their “ruthless savagery,” among them Iran’s new president and former judiciary chief Ebrahim Raisi, who Amnesty accuses of being a member of the “death commission” behind the secret executions. Raisi has denied involvement, but praised Khomeini’s “order” to carry out the purge.
“It is our ultimate wish that a conviction here leads to Noury and members of the Iranian regime being tried for crimes against humanity at an international tribunal,” Doustkam said. Noury’s defense team has contested the evidence against their client, highlighting perceived inconsistencies and unverifiable information in witness testimonies. They have also implied that groups on social media have created echo chambers where inaccuracies have percolated over many years, converting mere hearsay into supposed facts.

How Taliban 2.0 turned into a lethal force
Mohamed Chebaro/Arab News/August 25/2021
Step away from the dust and turmoil created by the hasty evacuation efforts at Kabul airport and it appears that after 20 years in the shadows the Taliban are in total command of Afghanistan’s destiny.
Ignore the emotionally driven news coverage justifying or questioning the wisdom behind the US withdrawal, and we can see a smiling Taliban leadership happy to stand by and watch, offering vague statements about a future Afghanistan for all, under Shariah rule of course, and where the place of women will be determined by the extremist interpretation of religious texts.
For an observer who has covered Afghanistan before and after 9/11, there can be only one conclusion: Thank you, America, for arming the Taliban, and for making terrorist groups around the world look on in envy as their fellow “mujahideen” win the lottery.
According to some estimates, the US may have left more than $100 billion of military hardware, including armored vehicles, light combat aircraft and a fleet of helicopters, to the Taliban 2.0.
The talks in Doha that led to the withdrawal now look like a mere capitulation, with only one vague guarantee that Afghanistan will no longer be a haven for groups willing to attack the West. But why would these groups stay in Afghanistan when other sanctuaries are available in countries such as Syria, Iraq, Lebanon and Yemen, not to mention European and US suburbs that are able to produce their own type of Islamist extremists.
Those in government, it seems, fail to see the impact this rushed withdrawal will have on the West’s global standing. Former UK Prime Minister Tony Blair has criticized the West’s loss of “strategic will,” claiming that Russia, China and Iran will take advantage of the continued retreat.
Meanwhile, up to 80,000 Taliban fighters now can enjoy an armory fit for a modern, lethally equipped fighting machine of 300,000 troops, which the US and NATO had trained in the two decades before their surrender in a matter of days. Even more alarmingly, these light drones, high-tech communication systems and advanced weapons could also reach terror groups scattered around the globe.
Many claim now that they saw all this coming. But I recall many informal discussions with military and civilian officials working in Afghanistan and Western capitals who insisted they were rebuilding the Afghan political system along a Western model of “one man one vote” and the rule of law. A lot of effort was wasted transporting ballot boxes to remote villages instead of trying to understand that the dynamic of authority and loyalty in that society works differently.
Like Lebanon, the former Yugoslavia, Rwanda and even Iraq, Afghanistan is a country whose people are a mix of ethnic, linguistic, tribal, religious and sectarian groups, all united by a competitive, yet conservative, outlook on life. The West hoped that liberal democracy would replace age-old patriarchal traditions, with tribal codes instead of police and laws. Despite faint hopes that the neo-Taliban have become more mature operators, the early signs are not encouraging.
The national Afghan army rebuilt by the US and NATO consisted of members of various communities. Recruits and their local commanders must have noted that their government was sidelined in the Doha talks and that national reconciliation talks were going nowhere. These soldiers knew better than anyone else that fighting the Taliban without the help of their foreign mentors would be futile. Hence, the ground was set for them to lay down their weapons, encouraged by Taliban propaganda that reached deep into towns and villages.
The national army’s collapse in Afghanistan is not new. The previous Afghan army built by the former Soviet Union was routed by the mujahideen in the early 1990s. Today, though, the failure of the army and police force, as well as the departure of President Ashraf Ghani, leaves the country facing the unknown.
Despite faint hopes that the neo-Taliban have become more mature operators, able to preserve and build on what has been achieved over two decades of foreign-assisted rule, the early signs are not encouraging. The rapid collapse of the army and the West’s chaotic evacuation have only emboldened the militants, which means it is business as usual for this vigilante group seeking to uphold its vision of righteousness against evil. It will not be long before the Taliban reinstate their old rules, and resort to torture and brutal punishments, while truckloads of exported opium and now weapons ensure enough income for their survival.
*Mohamed Chebaro is a British-Lebanese journalist with more than 25 years’ experience covering war, terrorism, defense, current affairs and diplomacy. He is also a media consultant and trainer.

Taliban drug trade hints at a way to protect Afghan culture
Rym Tina Ghazal/Arab News/August 25/2021
“Intolerance: Be like the ocean.” Many may not know that those words — a call for the acceptance of diversity — by the 13th-century poet Rumi may actually be those of one of Afghanistan’s legendary figures.
Rumi has been claimed by Turkey, Iran and even parts of the Arab world, but he is believed to have been born in 1207 in Balkh, north of what is present-day Afghanistan. It will be interesting to see what the Taliban make of Rumi and other totemic representatives of the cultures that once blossomed in the land now called Afghanistan. And if their consideration is less than positive, what can be done to protect the country’s historical patrimony?
For now, the signs do not augur well. Soon after swooping down on Kabul, the Taliban announced they were a changed group that now wanted peace. They declared an “amnesty” for all who previously worked against them, and said they were even willing to work with “our sisters.” Shortly after that, they blew up a statue. Did they destroy it because they believed statues promote idolatry or because it depicted a man who was their enemy? It is impossible to say for certain. But it is possible that the statue of Abdul Ali Mazari, a champion of Afghanistan’s ethnic Hazara minority who was executed by the Taliban in 1995, ticked more than one box. Of course, Mazari’s statue had no great cultural or artistic value. Its destruction has made it more famous than it would ever have been otherwise. But more interestingly, it stood in Bamiyan province. For it was in Bamiyan, in 2001, that the Taliban blew up two massive, 1,500-year-old statues of Buddha carved into a mountainside. The destruction of the statues remains possibly the biggest act of wanton destruction of culture in modern history. So, is the demolition of the Mazari statue a sign of things to come? With the fight against the “others” — the occupying foreign forces — now over, will the fight now turn inward against the “others” in Afghanistan’s historic, religious and social tableau?
Those “others” are plentiful in the country.
Afghanistan has a wealthy heritage and history, and a diversity of identities that have been overshadowed by wars and conflicts. It was from Afghanistan that Buddhism spread to China. Zoroastrianism, Christianity, Judaism and Hinduism thrived in the land before — and after — the arrival of Islam in the 7th century. As a major waystation on the age-old trade routes connecting India with Iran and China, Afghanistan is filled with the remains of ancient cities, monasteries and caravanserais that hosted famous travelers such as the 14th-century Moroccan Ibn Battuta and the 13th-century Venetian Marco Polo.
Ancient artifacts literally are strewn across its geography. About 80,000 of these now are housed in the National Museum. The Taliban destroyed a number of such relics in the museum the first time they came to power. But in February this year, its leaders forbade selling artifacts. They told their followers to “robustly protect, monitor and preserve” relics, halt illegal digs and safeguard “all historic sites.”We shall have to see if that injunction holds. Will the Taliban, for example, protect the historical heart of the city of Herat? It is currently on a UNESCO heritage site tentative list. Herat was captured by Alexander the Great in 330 B.C. during his campaign against the Achaemenids. It later became a major outpost for the Hellenistic Seleucid empire.Then, there is Balkh, which gave birth not only to Rumi but also Ibn Sina — better known in the West as Avicenna — and the poet Ferdowsi, both from around the turn of the first millennium. The name Balkh may be more familiar to those who frequent Western museums as Bactria, the ancient civilization that dates back to the early third millennium B.C. From the Seleucids to the Sassanians to many others, the history of civilization is layered in the ground of Balkh and many other cities like it across Afghanistan — sites such as Mes Aynak, home to a complex of at least seven Buddhist monasteries and under which may be Bronze Age structures.
It is tempting to think that the Taliban have changed — after all, the rest of the world certainly has. We want to believe that they will police adherence to their injunction to do no harm to the country’s historical and cultural heritage. The problem is, the militants are committed to keeping themselves pure from the poison of modernity. The future has not caught up with them and likely never will. And aside from their own version of an imagined past, the rest is dust to them. It is tempting to think that the Taliban have changed — after all, the rest of the world certainly has. But there may be a way out. The Taliban frown on drug use. But they do not have a moral problem with other people using it. In 2000, they banned poppy cultivation, much like they have banned trading in historical artifacts today. That poppy ban, however, eventually evaporated. Today, the Taliban control the world’s largest supply of illegal opiates — accounting for 80 percent of the global opium and heroin market. A record harvest in 2017 yielded sales the equivalent of 7 percent of Afghanistan’s gross domestic product.
The intriguing question is whether the Taliban can be induced to protect the heritage of Afghanistan if they were paid to do so. They may have no use and see no value in a sculpture of a Bactrian woman, for example. But can they be persuaded to keep it safe if it was a source of income? Can an international trust fund be established for this? And maybe for the safekeeping of artifacts outside Afghanistan? (Though, until when?) There are many questions, including the moral one of privileging the safety of cultural items over the safety and well-being of people. Yet, surely, it is still one that would be useful to have. But the first question is, will the Taliban take part?
*Rym Tina Ghazal is editor of an arts and culture magazine, and a former war correspondent. Copyright: Syndication Bureau