English LCCC Newsbulletin For Lebanese, Lebanese Related, Global News & Editorials
For  September 24/2020
Compiled & Prepared by: Elias Bejjani
#elias_bejjani_news

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Bible Quotations For today
‘Truly I tell you, there is no one who has left house or brothers or sisters or mother or father or children or fields, for my sake and for the sake of the good news, who will not receive a hundredfold now in this age houses, brothers and sisters, mothers and children, and fields, with persecutions and in the age to come eternal life.
Saint Mark 10/28-31/:”Peter began to say to Jesus, ‘Look, we have left everything and followed you.’Jesus said, ‘Truly I tell you, there is no one who has left house or brothers or sisters or mother or father or children or fields, for my sake and for the sake of the good news, who will not receive a hundredfold now in this age houses, brothers and sisters, mothers and children, and fields, with persecutions and in the age to come eternal life.

Titles For The Latest English LCCC Lebanese & Lebanese Related News & Editorials published on September 23-24/2021
Health Ministry: 602 new Corona cases, 7 deaths
Lebanon, Israel maritime border row reignites
Aoun to deliver Lebanon’s speech at UN General Assembly tomorrow, receives Interior Minister and chairs meeting for Lebanese delegation negotiating maritime borders
Aoun Meets Lebanese Sea Border Negotiations Team
Report: Elections in March, Expats Won't Vote or Have Seats
Miqati Travels to Paris to Meet with Macron
Report: Sakr Regularly Sold Ammonium Nitrate to Several Quarries
'People Have Lost Hope': Lebanon's Only Suicide Hotline Inundated
Berri discusses general situation with Czech ambassador, sends condolences cable to Algerian President over passing of Bensalah
Statement by UN Deputy Special Coordinator for Lebanon on provision of fuel to maintain critical health and WASH services
UN’s Wronecka says swift investigation into Beirut port explosion benchmark for independent judiciary
Bou Habib meets US ambassador
Mawlawi meets British Ambassador, cables Saudi counterpart marking KSA National Day
Army Chief bound for Turkey
Public Works Minister: Swift solutions to transport sector underway
Finance minister meets UN Special Coordinator for Lebanon, French delegation
Remarks by WHO Representative in Lebanon at WHO’s press briefing on Lebanon and Afghanistan
Souvent il suffit d'un homme/Jean-Marie Kassab/September 23/2021
Often it only takes one man./Jean-Marie Kassab/September 23/2021
Lebanon at risk of complete blackout by September-end: State power firm/Najia Houssari/Arab News/September 23/2021

Titles For The Latest English LCCC Miscellaneous Reports And News published on September 23-24/2021
Democrats remove military aid to Israel from US funding bill
Taliban Face Uphill Battle in Efforts to Speak at U.N. Meeting
Saudi King Expresses Hope for the Direct Talks with Iran
Saudi king tells Iran to end militias’ support for talks to continue
Tunisia's parliament speaker urges 'peaceful struggle' against president's moves
Tunisian president strengthens ‘transitional’ powers as step towards changing system
Cold war escalates between Dbeibah government and Tobruk parliament
Russia records another 21,438 coronavirus cases, highest daily number since August 15
Morocco’s Akhannouch announces ‘cohesive’ government coalition
Hamas says no municipal elections unless general election is called
Hamas loses support base in Sudan as assets dismantled

Titles For The Latest The Latest LCCC English analysis & editorials from miscellaneous sources published on September 23-24/2021
Unfriending Pakistan ...A reconsideration of the relationship is long overdue/Clifford D. May/The Washington Times/September 23/2021
Iran Joining the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation/Bradley Bowman/Ryan Brobst/Zane Zovak/FDD-Policy Brief//September 23/2021
The Squalid "Squad" Is Trying to Destroy Bipartisan Support for Israel/Alan M. Dershowitz/September 23/2021
We May Have Left Afghanistan, Mr. President, But We Are Still at War/Pete Hoekstra/Gatestone Institute/September 23/2021
How U.S. Failure in Afghanistan Validates the Koran’s Jihadist Teachings/Raymond Ibrahim/September 23/2021
World must act urgently to deny Iran a nuclear weapon/Dr. Majid Rafizadeh /Arab News/September 23/2021
AUKUS deal could strengthen Iran’s nuclear ambitions/Dnyanesh Kamat/The Arab Weekly/September 23/2021

The Latest English LCCC Lebanese & Lebanese Related News & Editorials published on September 23-24/2021
Health Ministry: 602 new Corona cases, 7 deaths
NNA/September 23/202
In its daily report on the COVID-19 developments, the Ministry of Public Health announced on Thursday the registration of 602 new Coronavirus infections, which raised the cumulative number of confirmed cases to-date to 620,552. The report added that 7 deaths were recorded during the past 24 hours.

Lebanon, Israel maritime border row reignites
AFP/The Arab Weekly/September 23/2021
BEIRUT--The dispute over the maritime border demarcation between Lebanon and Israel returned to the fore after the Israelis signed contracts with the US company Halliburton to explore for gas in areas which Beirut said are still a matter of dispute. Lebanon and Israel are at odds over the delineation of their territorial waters in the Mediterranean and negotiations between the old foes could lead to Lebanon being able to unlock valuable gas reserves amid its worst-ever financial crisis. “We will not back down on this issue or give up on Lebanese rights,” Prime Minister Najib Mikati said.
On Tuesday, Lebanese President Michel Aoun discussed with Mikati and Minister of Foreign Affairs Abdalah Bouhabib developments stemming from Israel commissioning the US company to provide evaluation services for exploration of gas and oil fields in the disputed area. The meeting was devoted to discussing the significance of the Israeli move and the measures that Lebanon will take in conjunction with the protest it has made to the United Nations.
Amal Mudallali, Lebanon’s representative to the UN, had submitted a letter to both UN Secretary-General Antonio asking the UN Security Council to “ensure that the drilling evaluation works are not located in a disputed area between Lebanon and Israel, in order to avoid any attack on Lebanon’s rights and sovereignty.”The letter also called on the UN to “prevent any future drilling in the disputed areas and to avoid steps that may pose a threat to international peace and security.”Israel had awarded Halliburton a contract to carry out evaluations towards oil and gas exploration in the disputed areas with Lebanon. This will involve drilling between three and five wells.
The head of the Progressive Socialist Party, Walid Jumblatt, said in a Tweet that Israel’s decision to award Halliburton a contract to drill oil wells in the disputed area “means burying the last inch of Lebanon’s sovereignty over its wealth and capabilities.”Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri announced at the beginning of last October a framework agreement on the maritime border in southern Lebanon under the auspices of the United Nations and with a US mediation to help overcome the demarcation row with Israel. Berri said, “the Israeli entity’s undertaking commissions and concluding offshore exploration contracts for Halliburton or other companies in the disputed area at sea represents a violation, or even a blow to the framework agreement sponsored by the United States of America and the United Nations. The first round of indirect negotiations was launched on October 14. The disputed area covered about 860 square kilometres. The second round of negotiations was held on the October 28, followed by a third round on October 29 and a fourth round on November 11. A team of military and civilian technicians conducted studies that showed that Lebanon’s rights extended beyond the ​​860 square kilometres to about 2,290 kilometres. The fifth round was held last May, during which the Lebanese negotiating team insisted on the country’s right to its maritime borders in accordance with the law of the sea.
Lebanon and Israel are at odds over the demarcation of territorial waters in the Mediterranean and negotiations could open the door for Lebanon to huge gas reserves amid the worst financial crisis in its history. Israel began a gas exploration campaign in the eastern Mediterranean about twelve years ago, after discovering two considerable gas fields. Other fields have been discovered in Egypt and Cyprus and companies are now drilling in Lebanese waters as well. This led to years of mutual tensions, as officials from both countries pledged to protect their resources and warned against any breaches. The issue of the demarcation of the maritime borders is one of the reasons for the continued state of war between Lebanon and Israel, especially in areas four and nine, which Beirut says are within its exclusive territorial waters. One of the areas where Lebanon is drilling is Block No. 9, which is adjacent to an Israeli marine area and includes disputed areas. The row also concerns two Lebanese regions that have not yet been licensed. Lebanon insists on controlling the entire area of ​​Block 9, while Israel asserts that any legal demarcation of the maritime borders between the two countries will allow it to share the gas resources in that block.
The two countries have competing claims over three potential gas fields in the Mediterranean, believed to contain a significant volume of gas. The United States is trying to bring them together to find common ground on development contracts.

Aoun to deliver Lebanon’s speech at UN General Assembly tomorrow, receives Interior Minister and chairs meeting for Lebanese delegation negotiating maritime borders

NNA/September 23/202
President of the Republic, General Michel Aoun, delivers Lebanon speech at the United Nations General Assembly, tomorrow at 4:00pm. The conference will convene at New York, in which the President will address Lebanon’s stance on local and regional developments, in addition to Lebanese constants. President Aoun will address the speech via video technology, from his office at the Presidential Palace.
Interior Minister:
The President met Interior Minister, Judge Bassam Mawlawi, today at the Presidential Palace, and tackled with him the security situation in light of recent reports. The Interior Ministry’s preparations for parliamentary elections, were also discussed in the meeting.
Statement:
After the meeting, the Interior Minister made the following statement:
“I was honored to meet His Excellency, the President, today. I thanked the President for his trust and I briefed him about the security situation, especially what happened on Saturday in what was revealed about nitrates, how the truck was discovered, how to analyze the taken samples and the progress of judicial investigations, in accordance with the law and regulations.
We also deliberated the ongoing preparations to complete elections on time, in a stable security environment, starting with the preparation of decrees to the formation of the election supervisory body, to other logistical preparations, leading to good and sound elections.
We will brief his Excellency, as well as the media, about all news related to the security situation, our ministry, or the elections”.
Questions & Answers:
Question: Are there any amendments to the proposed date for holding the elections, amid talks about holding the elections next March?
Answer: “If elections will be held in March, a legal amendment must be issued because this is related to deadlines. I have no objections to conducting elections in March in accordance with the law. The parliament’s mandate ends on May 21, and we have committed, in the ministerial policy statement, to hold elections before this date. Lists of delisting and voter lists are frozen according to the law on March 30. The deadline for their publication and correction occurs between February 10 and March 10. In the event that laws remain as they are, it may not be possible to hold elections before March 30, but in the event of legislative intervention to amend some articles and deadlines, this is a matter related to the parliament, as the Interior Ministry implements the law and doesn’t issue laws”.
Question: What about the share of expatriates in the voting for expatriate representatives?
Answer: “There is a committee, according to the law, formed by the ministries of Interior and Foreign Affairs to discuss this issue. If what is meant is about the additional six MPs, then we are proceeding with the issue according to what the law stipulates in terms of implementing this matter in the upcoming elections. Any other legislative intervention is up to the parliament”.
Question: Will you adopt the magnetic card?
Answer: “If there is an intention to launch this card, and if the government proceeds with it, we welcome that. This will speed up the counting process, and we are currently conducting an assessment of the cost of the elections to be presented to concerned parties to find out how to secure them. I had started my preparations before the government gained confidence, and soon I will have a clear plan to secure the matter from logistical points of view and present it to His Excellency the President, and the cabinet”.
Question: Most gas stations are closed. Why is there no security coordination to open these stations to the public?
Answer: “Yesterday, I spoke to the Energy Minister, who had sent me a request to security forces to support the ministry to inspect stations and stockpiles. Today we will deal with this matter”.
Maritime Border Negotiation Team:
The President chaired a meeting for thedelegation of indirect negotiations to demarcate southern maritime borders.
The delegation included head of the delegation, Brigadier General Pilot Bassam Yassin, members: Colonel, Mazen Basbous, and Engineer Wissam Shbat.
The delegation presented a report containing the stages of the negotiations from its inception to date, and an integrated strategy for the next stage in a way which guarantees Lebanon’s supreme interest in preserving its rights to its wealth in the exclusive economic zone.
Former Minister Nehme:
President Aoun met former Economy and Trade Minister, Raoul Nehme.
Nehme thanked the President for the support during his ministerial work, and wished success for the new government, hoping that it would succeed in facing internal and external difficulties.
Congratulations to the Saudi King:The President sent a congratulation cable to the Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques, King Salman Bin Abdul Aziz Al Saud, on the occasion of the unification of KSA.
Text: “On this occasion, I cannot but recall the ties of brotherhood which unite us, since the time of the late founder King Abdul Aziz Al Saud, for whom Lebanon maintains a prominent position, and who laid the foundations of convergence on the values of goodness and originality which your brotherly Kingdom continues to follow towards our homeland and people. As I benefit from this occasion to congratulate your Majesty, I pray for your continued health and wellness in leading your brotherly kingdom on the paths of progress and determination, and for God Almighty to preserve it, granting its children contentment, and crowning your efforts in consolidating the bonds of Arab solidarity. A solidarity which we need today to face various challenges which afflict our region, and the world. May God Almighty preserve your days with his blessings, and keeping all the hardships away from your brotherly country”. -- Presidency Press Office

Aoun Meets Lebanese Sea Border Negotiations Team
Naharnet/September 23/2021
President Michel Aoun on Thursday met with the Lebanese delegation that recently held indirect sea border negotiations with Israel. The National News Agency said the meeting was dedicated to “evaluating the course of the negotiations and the next steps after Israel signed evaluation contracts for gas and oil excavation in the disputed area, especially that this step contradicts with the negotiations course.” Also during the meeting, the President handed the delegation a report containing “the phases of the negotiations since their inception and a complete strategy for the coming period in a manner that guarantees Lebanon’s higher interest in preserving its right to its resources in the Exclusive Economic Zone,” NNA added.

Report: Elections in March, Expats Won't Vote or Have Seats
Naharnet/September 23/2021
The rules according to which the parliamentary elections will be held in spring have been specified, “credible sources” told al-Joumhouria newspaper. “The parliamentary committee tasked with studying the file has agreed on a host of essential points,” the sources said in remarks published Thursday.
According to the sources, the elections will be held according to the current law, which divides Lebanon into 15 electoral districts, while applying proportional representation in some electorates and allowing one preferential vote. The date of the elections will meanwhile be brought forward from May 8 to March 27 so that does not fall in the Muslim fasting month of Ramadan. “Expat voting will not take place for logistic and financial reasons and the article stipulating the creation of six parliamentary seats for expats will be scrapped,” the sources said. As for the magnetic card stipulated by the current electoral law, it has been decided to refer its issue to the government, although most MPs believe that it will be impossible to produce the cards before the elections, the sources added. A legislative session will meanwhile be held in the coming weeks to introduce amendments to the current law, especially as to scrapping expat voting and expat seats and the issue of magnetic cards and mega-centers. The Free Patriotic Movement is meanwhile opposed to calling off expat voting, while the parliamentary committee has failed to agree on axing the current electoral law and introducing a new one based on proportional representation with entire Lebanon turned into a single district, the daily said.

Miqati Travels to Paris to Meet with Macron
Naharnet/September 23/2021
Prime Minister Najib Miqati traveled Thursday to Paris for talks with French President Emmanuel Macron. Political sources expected positive outcomes from Miqati's visit to France, as “it could pave the way for more visits to Europe and to Arab countries.”The Paris meeting could be the “French gate” to international support to Lebanon, the sources said. They revealed to the PSP's al-Anbaa newspaper that Miqati will talk with Macron about unblocking $11 billion that were pledged to Lebanon at CEDRE conference in Paris in 2018. Miqati and Macron will also talk about the aid fund that was recently raised in the international conferences in support of Lebanon and how the European countries can contribute. The talks will also tackle the required reforms that the government intends to achieve and reviving negotiations with the International Monetary Fund.

Report: Sakr Regularly Sold Ammonium Nitrate to Several Quarries
Naharnet/September 23/2021
The owner of the Bekaa ammonium nitrate truck, Saadallah al-Solh, admitted, after being arrested on Tuesday by the army in Faraya, that he had bought the nitrates from Maroun al-Sakr, the brother of fugitive pro-Lebanese Forces businessman Ibrahim al-Sakr, media reports said on Thursday.
“This was not the first purchase,” al-Akhbar newspaper quoted Solh as telling interrogators. Solh added that Sakr has been selling nitrates to quarries and stone crushing plants. He added that Sakr was smuggling the nitrates to Lebanon “inside containers shipping agricultural fertilizers.”
Two hypotheses had been previously proposed concerning the source of the nitrates -- either they were smuggled from Syria or they were stolen from the port of Beirut, al-Akhbar newspaper said. The newspaper added that chemical experts have analyzed the nitrates and concluded that the purity and density of the seized nitrates were completely different from those in the exploded Warehouse 12 at the Port of Beirut. The experts also mentioned that the nitrates seized in Baalbek are “recent compared to the nitrates that were at the port.”

'People Have Lost Hope': Lebanon's Only Suicide Hotline Inundated

Agence France Presse/September 23/2021
The phones at Lebanon's only suicide hotline hardly ever stop ringing as people grow more and more desperate in the face of a financial downturn that has spurred a mental health crisis. In one call, a father says he is thinking of taking his own life because he is unable to feed his children, and in another, a man recently made homeless says he has lost all hope. There are dozens of such calls every day, and around 1,100 a month, in a nation that has seen an exodus of healthcare specialists and shortages of drugs to treat anxiety, depression and psychosis. The number of people phoning in has more than doubled since last year, and is expected to continue to grow in the coming months as hopes dim for a battered population pushed to the brink by a seemingly endless succession of woes. One morning this month, "we woke up at 5:30 am to a call from a 31-year-old who is homeless" and feeling suicidal on Beirut's east-west flyover, said Mia Atoui, the co-founder and vice president of Embrace, the NGO that runs the hotline. Before that, the organization got a call from a dad living in Lebanon's Bekaa Valley who was feeling suicidal because he had four kids he could no longer afford to feed, she added.
"We are receiving similar calls every day... the crisis has worsened enormously." Atoui said higher demand had prompted the organization to extend hotline operations to 21 hours a day, up from 17, with the aim of reaching 24 hours in the coming months. A free therapy clinic run by the organization is fully booked until October, with more than 100 people on the waiting list. The number of children phoning in has also risen, with people under the age of 18 accounting for 15 percent of callers in July, up from less than 10 percent in previous months."A lot of people have lost hope," Atoui said.
Epidemic of loneliness
Since the start of the country's financial crisis in 2019, the triggers for emotional distress have kept piling up, with the coronavirus pandemic and a monster blast at the Beirut port last year stretching a nation's psyche to its limit. The past four months have seen Lebanon land on even tougher times, with dwindling foreign currency reserves sparking shortages of key imports including fuel, medicine and bread amid around-the-clock power cuts. With hospitals going out of service and schools at risk of closing down, Lebanese have fled the country en masse, leading to an epidemic of loneliness on top of the misery that now plagues daily life. Fadi Maalouf, the head of the psychiatry department at the prestigious American University of Beirut Medical Centre, said he has seen an upsurge in the load of patients coming in for treatment. "We are definitely seeing more anxiety and depression, but also more advanced conditions," he said.
The situation, Maalouf said, had been worsened by a dual dilemma. The bulk of mental health specialists have left, leaving patients struggling to find expert help, while shortages of antidepressants, mood stabilizers, and anti-anxiety medication have interrupted treatment for many.
"We saw patients who cut down on their treatment so that the supply they have would last longer, and they came to us in our outpatient clinic with a worsening of their condition," Maalouf said. "We even saw patients who decided to stop their treatment and they become more severely depressed, even suicidal, and they ended up in our emergency room," he added."These are all patients who were previously stable." 'Psychological first-aid' With demand on the rise, clinical psychologist Nanar Iknadiossian is struggling to keep up. The 29-year-old works for 13 hours a day in back-to-back sessions and still receives new referrals she is unable to take on. The pace at which the crisis is worsening requires "very quick solution-focused approaches" to therapy, she told AFP. "It's like psychological first aid... we are just doing damage control." But with Lebanon's economic crisis causing poverty rates to climb to cover nearly 80 percent of the population, many cannot afford food, let alone expert help. "Last month, we received a call from a widowed mother who has three kids she can't afford to feed," said Magalie Eid, a 23-year-old volunteer operator at Embrace.
"She was lost."Boushra, a 26-year-old volunteer operator who asked to be identified by only her first name over privacy concerns, said her job now feels like "mission impossible"."We are supposed to give hope in a country where hope does not exist."

Berri discusses general situation with Czech ambassador, sends condolences cable to Algerian President over passing of Bensalah
NNA/September 23/202
House Speaker, Nabih Berri, on Thursday welcomed at the Second Presidency in Ain El-Tineh, the Czech Ambassador to Lebanon, Jiri Dolezel, with whom he discussed the current general situation and the bilateral relations between the two countries. Speaker Berri also met with the Board Chairman and General Manager of the Lebanese Tobacco and Tunbac Monopoly Department (Regie), Nassif Seklaoui, on top of a delegation, who briefed the Speaker on the efforts and projects undertaken by the “Regie” amid the current circumstances. Berri also received the Grand Mufti Al-Jaafari, Sheikh Ahmed Qabalan, and Dr. Ali Qabalan, with talks touching on the current general situation. On the other hand, Berri cabled the President of the People's Democratic Republic of Algeria, Abdelmadjid Tebboune, expressing his deepest condolences on the passing of former Algerian President Abdelkader Bensalah. Berri also sent a similar condolences cable to the Speaker of the Algerian National People’s Assembly, Ibrahim Bougali.

Statement by UN Deputy Special Coordinator for Lebanon on provision of fuel to maintain critical health and WASH services

UNIC /September 23/202
Dr Najat Rochdi, Deputy Special Coordinator for Lebanon, Resident and Humanitarian Coordinator, is announcing the start of the delivery of fuel to critical healthcare and water institutions across Lebanon to ensure continuous provision of services to the most vulnerable populations affected by the energy and fuel crisis. The severe electricity and fuel shortages which have been affecting Lebanon over the past weeks, are impeding the provision of essential services, including health care and water, and has resulted in tremendous additional hardship across all populations. The fuel shortage has also posed additional operational challenges to the humanitarian community assistingthe country’s most vulnerable populations. “In order to mitigate additional suffering and preventing loss of lives, I have asked the World Food Programme (WFP) in Lebanon, as the global humanitarian lead on logistics, to develop an emergency fuel-supply plan to maintain critical health, water and sanitation services for the most vulnerable populations and prevent the discontinuation of lifesaving activities implemented by humanitarian actors,” said Ms Najat Rochdi, United Nations Humanitarian Coordinator for Lebanon.
This three-month plan, developed in collaboration with UNICEF, WHO and the NGOs working on health and WASH issues, will provide fuel to all public hospitals, primary health care centersand dispensaries servicing the most vulnerable communities in the different regions in Lebanon and relied upon by an estimated 2.1 million annually. It will also provide fuel to four water establishments to secure continuous water supply to about 2.3 million people across the country. “The implementation of this emergency fuel supply plan will not impact existing national fuel reserves, nor will the program interrupt future national fuel deliveries” clarified Dr Rodchi. “All fuel will be purchased at a non-subsidized rate and add to the existing national fuel stocks” she stressed. This is an exceptional emergency support for a maximum duration of three months. The responsibility to ensure uninterrupted provision of basic services remains with the Government of Lebanon. “I call on the government to save no effort to implement, at the earliest possible, sustainable solutions to the on-going energy crisis and to protect the rights of families in Lebanon to access essential services” Dr Rodchi said. This exceptional intervention is part of the broader UN coordinated Emergency Response Plan launched in early August with a financial ask of US$383 million, to provide critical life-saving humanitarian assistance to most vulnerable Lebanese and migrants affected by the ongoing crises. It complements and supports humanitarian assistance provided through UNRWA programs as well as the Lebanon Crisis Response Plan for Syrian refugees and their host communities. --UNIC

UN’s Wronecka says swift investigation into Beirut port explosion benchmark for independent judiciary
NNA/September 23/202
UN Special Coordinator for Lebanon, Ms. Joanna Wronecka, on Thursday posted a series of tweets: “Elections are an opportunity that should not be missed to improve women’s representation in Parliament and in public life.”“I thank Minister of Justice Henri Khoury for a fruitful discussion today on the role of the judiciary and the challenges it faces. The swift investigation into the Beirut port explosion will be benchmark for independent and effective judiciary in Lebanon.”“I met with Defense Minister Maurice Sleem. We discussed the importance of safeguarding Lebanon 's security and stability during this critical period, the UN’s commitment to supporting the Lebanese Army, and its vital importance to Resolution1701.”“With Finance Minister Youssef Khalil we discussed today the financial and economic crisis and its painful impact on the Lebanese people. Lebanon now needs quick steps to stabilize the situation, institute reforms with a strong social safety net to pave the way for recovery.”

Bou Habib meets US ambassador

NNA/September 23/202
Minister of Foreign Affairs and Emigrants, Dr. Abdallah Bou Habib, on Thursday received US Ambassador to Lebanon, Dorothy Shea, with discussions reportedly focusing on the bilateral relations, the maritime border demarcation, support for the Lebanese army, as well as negotiations with the International Monetary Fund.

Mawlawi meets British Ambassador, cables Saudi counterpart marking KSA National Day

NNA/September 23/202
Minister of Interior and Municipalities, Judge Bassam Mawlawi, on Thursday welcomed British Ambassador to Lebanon, Ian Collard, with whom he discussed bilateral relations between the two countries. Mawalwi also welcomed MP Sami Fatfat and discussed with him the general situation on the domestic scene. National Traffic Safety Council’s Secretary, Dr. Ramzi Salameh, also visited Mawlawi and tackled with him traffic safety in Lebanon. On another level, Mawlawi cabled his Saudi counterpart, Prince Abdulaziz bin Saud bin Nayef bin Abdulaziz, and KSA Ambassador to Lebanon, Walid bin Abdullah Bukhari, congratulating both on Saudi National Day.

Army Chief bound for Turkey

NNA/September 23/202
The Lebanese Army announced on Thursday via Twitter that LAF Commander, General Joseph Aoun, has left to the state of Turkey, at the invitation of his counterpart, Chief of Staff of the Turkish Armed Forces, General Yasar Guler, in order to bolster means of cooperation between the armies of the two countries.

Public Works Minister: Swift solutions to transport sector underway
NNA/September 23/202
Minister of Public Works and Transportation, Ali Hamieh, took to Twitter on Thursday to announce that work is underway to devise "swift" and "situational" solutions to the public transport. "We will be working on compiling a bundle of unimplemented projects requiring credit lines within a unified public transport strategy. We will also work on drawing up swift and situational solutions to this sector, such as providing buses by asking some friendly states for donations," Minister Hamieh tweeted.

Finance minister meets UN Special Coordinator for Lebanon, French delegation
NNA/September 23/202
Minister of Finance, Dr. Youssef Khalil, on Thursday received the United Nations Special Coordinator for Lebanon, Joanna Wronecka, with whom he discussed financial and economic affairs. On emerging, Wronecka described the meeting ambiance as very fruitful. "I would like to express, as usual, the United Nations’ support for Lebanon and affirm at the same time the importance of implementing the financial reforms that we consider very important, as well as the resumption of negotiations with the International Monetary Fund,” Wronecka said. “I hope that the very ambitious reform plan will be implemented because what is important for us is to see progress and easing the painful hardships on the people, especially with regard to the electricity and fuel sector,” she added. On the other hand, Minister Khalil met with a delegation from the French Embassy, chaired by the Director of the Regional Economic Department at the Embassy, François De Ricolfis, who congratulated him on the formation of the new government.

Remarks by WHO Representative in Lebanon at WHO’s press briefing on Lebanon and Afghanistan
UNIC/September 23/202
The current complex crisis has heavily impacted the health system in Lebanon, decreasing availability, affordability, accessibility and quality of health care in general, and threatening the sustainability and resilience of the health system.
Due to the severe financial and fuel crisis, most hospitals are currently operating at 50% capacity; only lifesaving hospital interventions are being prioritized. Primary health care centres are rationing fuel consumption by reducing opening hours, and more than 600 private pharmacies are temporarily closed.
It is estimated that around 15–17% out of 20 000 registered nurses have left the country over the past 12 months, while more than 1000 have been laid off. Around 40% of medical doctors (mainly specialists) have permanently emigrated or are working on a part-time basis outside of the country. It is estimated that the Ministry of Public Health will need to cover health care for at least 70% of the population (compared to 48% prior to the current crisis) as unemployment and poverty are rising. The Government's fiscal and financial situation has resulted in unpaid bills to both private and public health sectors, threatening the sustainability of health services, and increasing health financial hardship on vulnerable populations. WHO will continue to support the Ministry of Public Health and people of Lebanon by:
1. Filling acute gaps in medications: more than 550 000 patients are receiving acute and chronic treatment.
2. Maintaining access to essential health care through its support to 12 public hospitals with equipment, supplies, recruitment of more than 620 nursing staff, training and reimbursement of intensive care for uninsured vulnerable individuals, contributing towards the doubling of public sector hospitalization capacity.
3. Bridge humanitarian support towards sustainable development, including integration of primary health packages of care.
4. Adopt innovative approaches during the COVID-19 response where selected major public hospitals have been twinned with private academic hospitals aiming at improving and standardizing COVID-19 and critical care practices.
WHO remains committed to continuing our immediate, lifesaving work in Lebanon, while also planning for longer term strategies for health. We count on the support of all stakeholders, so that together, we can take Lebanon from its current crisis to a future in which all Lebanese can enjoy health as a basic human right.

Souvent il suffit d'un homme
Jean-Marie Kassab/September 23/2021
Des fois il suffit d'une seule personne, un homme ou une femme qui ait assez de courage pour poursuivre une mission jusqu 'au bout malgré les difficultés rencontrées ou les dangers qui menacent.
Tenez voir le juge Bitar. Il ne bénéficie d'aucun appui. Il n'a pas de parti politique pour le soutenir ni de milice pour le protéger dans un pays où l'être humain ne coute plus un sous. Dans un pays occupé par l'Iran, une nation qui venère la violence.  Bitar a certes l'appui celeste des 214 âmes qui le soutiennent et particulièrement celui du petit ange denommé Alexandra Najjar , appui imposant et lourd de sens , mais insuffisant face aux brutes qui gouvernent le Liban.
Le pouvoir essentiel de Bitar est sa conscience, or la conscience est la plus importante qualité pour un juge.
Souvent il suffit d'un homme...

Often it only takes one man...
Jean-Marie Kassab/September 23/2021
Sometimes it only takes one person, a man or a woman who has enough courage to pursue a mission to the end despite the difficulties encountered or the dangers that threaten.
See Judge Bitar. He doesn't get any support. He has no political party to support him or militia to protect him in a country where human beings no longer cost a dime. In a country occupied by Iran, a nation that worships violence.
Bitar certainly has the celestial support of the 214 souls who support him and especially that of the little angel named Alexandra Najjar, an imposing and meaningful support, but insufficient face to the bullies who govern Lebanon.
The essential power of Bitar is his conscience, and consciousness is the most important quality for a judge.Often it only takes one man...

Lebanon at risk of complete blackout by September-end: State power firm
Najia Houssari/Arab News/September 23/2021
BEIRUT: Lebanon’s state electricity company EDL said on Thursday it risked a total blackout across the country by September-end as its fuel oil reserves dwindle. Lebanon, in the throes of one of the worst economic meltdowns of modern history, has been plagued by worsening fuel shortages for the past few months with most Lebanese relying on private generators for power. The company can generate less than 500 megawatts from fuel oil it secured through a deal with Iraq, it said in a statement. It said its reserves of both Grade A and Grade B fuel oil had reached a critical point and had run out already for some plants that have now stopped production.“The network already experienced total blackouts across the country seven times and if this continues there is a high risk of reaching total and complete blackout by end September,” the statement said. Iraq signed an agreement in July allowing the cash-strapped Lebanese government to pay for 1 million tons of heavy fuel oil a year in goods and services.
FASTFACT
Lebanon, in the throes of one of the worst economic meltdowns of modern history, has been plagued by worsening fuel shortages for the past few months with most Lebanese relying on private generators for power. The heavy fuel oil is not suitable for use in Lebanon, but it is exchanged in tenders for a suitable grade. EDL held Lebanon’s central bank responsible for not securing dollars in exchange for “the surplus of local currency accumulated in the company’s account to generate power.” Elsewhere, Hezbollah has continued to provide fuel for municipalities and hospitals hoping to procure Iranian diesel through the Al-Amana company, which is under US sanctions. The administration of a hospital in northern Lebanon denied having received fuel through Al-Amana. Meanwhile, Prime Minister Najib Mikati headed to Paris on Thursday, his first official visit after the formation of the government, and is expected to meet French President Emmanuel Macron on Friday. France exerted intense pressure on Lebanese politicians to form a government in line with the initiative launched by Macron in the aftermath of the Beirut blast, which rocked the country last August. On the eve of Mikati’s visit to the French capital, the International Support Group for Lebanon welcomed the formation of the new government and the parliament’s vote of confidence in the administration and its program.

The Latest English LCCC Miscellaneous Reports And News published on September 23-24/2021
Democrats remove military aid to Israel from US funding bill
The Arab Weekly/September 23/2021
WASHINGTON--Democratic lawmakers on Tuesday removed $1 billion in military funding for Israel from legislation to fund the US government after objections from liberals in the House of Representatives, but party leaders pledged to bring the matter up again later this week. Some House Democrats objected to a provision in a stopgap spending bill to provide the additional funding so Israel can replenish its “Iron Dome” missile-defence system. The US company Raytheon Technologies Corp produces many Iron Dome components. The House is debating legislation to fund the federal government through December 3 and raise the nation’s borrowing limit. The dispute forced the House Rules Committee to adjourn briefly before leaders of the Appropriations Committee pledged that funding for the Israeli system would be included in a defence spending bill later this year. That could set the stage for another dispute over military aid for Israel. On Tuesday evening, House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer said he would bring a bill to the House floor later this week that would fully fund the missile-defence system and he expected it to pass. “We ought to do it … it is absolutely essential,” Hoyer said. Democratic Representative Jamaal Bowman, one of the Democrats who had concerns about the provision, said earlier that House members had not been given enough time to consider the matter. “The problem is leadership (will) just throw something on our table, give us about five minutes to decide what we’re going to do and then tries to move forward with it,” Bowman told reporters. The United States has already provided more than $1.6 billion for Israel to develop and build the Iron Dome system, according to a US Congressional Research Service report last year. The funding reflects perennially strong support for aid to Israel among both Democrats and Republicans. Israeli Foreign Minister Yair Lapid said in a statement that the removal of the funding was “a technical postponement” and he had been assured by US Democratic leaders that funds for Iron Dome would be transferred soon. Some liberal Democrats objected to US-Israel policy this year, citing the many Palestinian casualties after Israel struck back following Hamas rocket attacks in May.Israel said most of the 4,350 rockets fired from Gaza during the conflict were blown out of the sky by Iron Dome interceptors.

Taliban Face Uphill Battle in Efforts to Speak at U.N. Meeting
Associated Press/September 23/2021
The new rulers of Afghanistan have an uphill battle in their efforts to be recognized in time to address other world leaders at the United Nations this year. The Taliban are challenging the credentials of the ambassador from Afghanistan's former government and asking to speak at the General Assembly's high-level meeting of world leaders this week, according to a letter sent to the United Nations. The decision now rests with a U.N. committee that generally meets in November and will issue a ruling "in due course," the General Assembly's spokeswoman said Wednesday. U.N. officials are confronting this dilemma just over a month after the Taliban, ejected from Afghanistan by the United States and its allies after 9/11, swept back into power by taking over territory with surprising speed as U.S. forces prepared to withdraw from the country at the end of August. The Western-backed government collapsed on Aug. 15. In cases of disputes over seats at the United Nations, the General Assembly's nine-member credentials committee must meet to make a decision. Letters from Afghanistan's currently recognized U.N. ambassador, Ghulam Isaczai, who represents the former government, and from Taliban Foreign Minister Ameer Khan Muttaqi, are before the committee, assembly spokeswoman Monica Grayley said. "Only the committee can decide when to meet," Grayley said. The committee's members are the United States, Russia, China, Bahama, Bhutan, Chile, Namibia, Sierra Leone and Sweden. Afghanistan is listed as the final speaker of the ministerial meeting on Monday, Sept. 27, and if there no decision by then, Isaczai, Afghanistan's currently recognized U.N. ambassador, will give the address. When the Taliban last ruled from 1996 to 2001, the U.N. refused to recognize their government and instead gave Afghanistan's seat to the previous, warlord-dominated government of President Burhanuddin Rabbani, who was killed by a suicide bomber in 2011. It was Rabbani's government that brought Osama bin Laden, the mastermind of 9/11, to Afghanistan from Sudan in 1996. The Taliban have said they want international recognition and financial help to rebuild the war-battered country. But the makeup of the new Taliban government poses a dilemma for the United Nations. Several of the interim ministers -- including Muttaqi -- are on the U.N.'s so-called blacklist of international terrorists and funders of terrorism. Credentials committee members could also use Taliban recognition as leverage to press for a more inclusive government that guarantees human rights, especially for girls who were barred from going to school during their previous rule, and women who weren't able to work. The Taliban said they were nominating a new U.N. permanent representative, Mohammad Suhail Shaheen, the U.N. spokesman said. He has been a spokesman for the Taliban during peace negotiations in Qatar.

Saudi King Expresses Hope for the Direct Talks with Iran
Associated Press/September 23/2021
Saudi Arabia's monarch expressed hope Wednesday that the kingdom's direct talks with Iran will lead to confidence building as the two bitter regional rivals take small steps toward dialogue following several years of heightened tensions. King Salman made the remarks in a pre-recorded speech delivered to leaders gathered for the U.N. General Assembly. He said Iran is a neighbor of Saudi Arabia, and that the kingdom hopes talks between the two nations can lead to tangible results that pave the way to achieving the aspirations of the region's people. He cautioned, though, that relations must be based on respect of national sovereignty and the cessation of support for sectarian militias. Relations between Sunni-ruled Saudi Arabia and Shiite-ruled Iran hit a low when the Trump administration was exerting maximum pressure on Iran. During those years, Iran was accused of being behind multiple attacks on energy targets in the Persian Gulf— including a stunning strike on an Aramco refinery in 2019— and of supporting Houthi fighters in Yemen, where the kingdom has been at war for more than six years. In April, news emerged that the rivals had held a first round of talks in Iraq after President Joe Biden's election. Former President Donald Trump had pulled the U.S. out of a nuclear deal in 2018; Biden said the U.S. wants to return to the pact, though talks have stalled. The two regional foes met again in New York on the sidelines of the U.N. General Assembly, according to Iran's semi-official Mehr news agency. The site reported Wednesday that a meeting of foreign ministers and officials from Iran, Saudi Arabia, Turkey, Qatar, Egypt, Kuwait, Jordan and France took place. The EU foreign policy chief was also in attendance. The meeting was chaired by Iraq's foreign minister. Iran's foreign minister, Hossein Amirabollahian, was quoted by Mehr as saying the priority of Iran's new government "is to strengthen and develop relations with its neighbors and the region." He also met with Finnish, German, Austrian, Swiss and Croatian foreign ministers on Tuesday in New York, according to Mehr. Newly sworn-in Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi has remained in Iran amid the ongoing pandemic. He was severely critical of American policies in his speech delivered remotely to the U.N. gathering Tuesday, speaking shortly after Biden's in-person remarks. King Salman reiterated Saudi concerns about Iran's nuclear program, which Tehran insists is for peaceful energy purposes. He also used his speech to stress Saudi Arabia's longstanding public position on Palestinian statehood, saying that a lasting peace must guarantee an independent Palestinian state with east Jerusalem as its capital.
He acknowledged "economic difficulties," but said despite such challenges the kingdom remains a major donor of humanitarian aid and global efforts to combat COVID-19 as a Group of 20 nation. The coronavirus pandemic sent oil prices crashing last year, eating away at the kingdom's key source of revenue. Saudi Arabia has led major oil producers in a pact to curb production to help support oil prices.

Saudi king tells Iran to end militias’ support for talks to continue
AP/The Arab Weekly/September 23/2021
Saudi Arabia views negotiations with Iran as essential for a solution in Yemen.
RIYADH--Saudi Arabia’s King Salman bin Abdulaziz al-Saud expressed hope Wednesday that the kingdom’s direct talks with Iran will lead to confidence-building and tangible results that pave the way to achieving the aspirations of the region’s people. The king, however, cautioned that relations must be based on respect of national sovereignty and the cessation of support for sectarian militias, in apparent reference to the Iran-backed Houthis in Yemen. Iran and Saudi Arabia, two bitter regional rivals, have been taking small steps toward dialogue following several years of heightened tensions. King Salman, who described Iran as a neighbour of Saudi Arabia, made Wednesday’s remarks in a pre-recorded speech delivered to leaders gathered for the UN General Assembly. Riyadh views negotiations with Tehran as essential for a solution in Yemen, a vision based on the conviction that the Houthis have so far been intransigent to serve a broader strategy that Iran is pursuing to score wins on different fronts, whether in its disputes with Saudi Arabia, differences with other countries in the region or in nuclear negotiations. In this respect, observers consider that the Kingdom has become increasingly convinced that dialogue with Iran is the best way to resolve current crises, including the Yemeni conflict.
Turning to the fighting in Yemen, the Saudi king said on Wednesday that the Houthi militias keep rejecting the initiatives offered through the United Nations to peacefully resolve the conflict. “The peace initiative in Yemen, tabled by the Kingdom last March, sought to end the bloodshed and conflict. It ought to put an end to the suffering of the brotherly Yemeni people,” the king said. “Unfortunately, the terrorist Houthi militias reject peaceful solutions. They have placed their bets on a military option to take over more territory in Yemen,” he added. Some months ago, Saudi Foreign Minister Prince Faisal bin Farhan bin Abdullah unveiled proposals to end the war in Yemen, including a ceasefire across the country, under the supervision of the United Nations.
This plan garnered wide Arab and international support as well as being welcomed by the United Nations. However, it was met with Houthi intransigence. Relations between Sunni-ruled Saudi Arabia and Shia-ruled Iran hit a low when the Trump administration was exerting maximum pressure on Iran. During those years, Iran was accused of being behind multiple attacks on energy targets in the Arabian Gulf, including a stunning strike on an Aramco refinery in 2019 and of supporting Houthi militias in Yemen, where the kingdom has been at war for more than six years.
In April, news emerged that the rivals had held a first round of talks in Iraq after President Joe Biden’s election. Former President Donald Trump had pulled the US out of a nuclear deal in 2018; Biden said the US wants to return to the pact, though talks have since stalled.
The two regional foes met again in New York on the sidelines of the UN General Assembly, according to Iran’s semi-official Mehr news agency.
The site reported Wednesday that a meeting of foreign ministers and officials from Iran, Saudi Arabia, Turkey, Qatar, Egypt, Kuwait, Jordan and France took place. The EU foreign policy chief was also in attendance. The meeting was chaired by Iraq’s foreign minister.
Iran’s foreign minister, Hossein Amirabollahian, was quoted by Mehr as saying the priority of Iran’s new government “is to strengthen and develop relations with its neighbours and the region.” He also met Finnish, German, Austrian, Swiss and Croatian foreign ministers on Tuesday in New York, according to Mehr. Newly sworn-in Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi has remained in Iran amid the ongoing pandemic. He was severely critical of American policies in his speech delivered remotely to the UN gathering Tuesday, speaking shortly after Biden’s in-person remarks. King Salman reiterated Saudi concerns over Iran’s nuclear programme, which Tehran insists is for peaceful energy purposes. He also used his speech to stress Saudi Arabia’s longstanding public position on Palestinian statehood, saying that a lasting peace must guarantee an independent Palestinian state with east Jerusalem as its capital.
He acknowledged “economic difficulties,” but said despite such challenges the kingdom remains a major donor of humanitarian aid and global efforts to combat COVID-19 as a Group of 20 nations. The coronavirus pandemic sent oil prices crashing last year, eating away at the kingdom’s key source of revenue. Saudi Arabia has led major oil producers in a pact to curb production to help support oil prices.

Tunisia's parliament speaker urges 'peaceful struggle' against president's moves
AFP/September 23/2021
The speaker of Tunisia's parliament Rached Ghannouchi called Thursday for "peaceful struggle" against a return to "absolute one-man rule", a day after President Kais Saied took steps towards rule by decree. "There is no longer any alternative to struggle, naturally a peaceful struggle," the head of the Islamist-inspired Ennahdha party said in an interview with AFP. Saied on Wednesday announced decrees that strengthen the powers of his office at the expense of the government and parliament. Ghannouchi called the moves "a step back towards absolute one-man rule" a decade after Tunisia's 2011 revolution. "We call on the people to take part in peaceful actions to resist dictatorship and return Tunisia to the path of democracy," he said. The provisions come almost two months after the president sacked the Ennahdha-supported government of Hichem Mechichi and suspended parliament, presenting himself as the ultimate interpreter of the constitution.

Tunisian president strengthens ‘transitional’ powers as step towards changing system
AP/The Arab Weekly/September 23/2021
Saied’s decree eliminates the speaker of parliament’s presidential succession in the case of a vacancy.
TUNIS--Tunisian President Kais Saied took exceptional measures on Wednesday that strengthen his executive and legislative powers as he will rule by decree in the absence of parliament and a prime minister.
The provisions, laid out in a series of legal texts published in the country’s official gazette, come almost two months after his decision to invoke Article 80 of the Constitution to assume emergency powers because, as he asserted on July 25, the state faced an “imminent threat” due to political, constitutional, economic and health crises. Under the previous system most of the executive power was in the hands of the government. The measures announced by Saied clearly tip the balance in favour of the presidency. Before Saied’s move, a constitutional impasse between the president and parliament over prerogatives had led to government paralysis. “Legislative texts will be promulgated in the form of decrees signed by the President of the Republic,” one of the new provisions stipulates. Another text reads that “the President shall exercise executive power with the help of a Council of Ministers chaired by a Head of Government”.
Saied has not yet named a prime minister despite promises to appoint one soon.
In recent weeks, he has come under growing pressure from key Tunisian political players and Western donors to name a premier and explain how he intends to move past the crisis. He has reshuffled several portfolios in the cabinet without picking a new prime minister. “The President of the Republic presides over the Council of Ministers and may mandate the Head of Government to replace him/her,” says another. This replacement applies to short-term or long-term vacancies and effectively establishes a new line of succession. In the case of a vacancy, the prime minister and after him the minister of justice, will assume the office of president. Before this decision, the successor to the president in the case of a vacancy was parliament’s speaker.
Current speaker of parliament, Rached Ghannouchi, is the head of the Islamist party Ennhada, which was politically sidelined after Saied’s July 25 move suspending all parliamentary activities and lifting the legal immunity of members of parliament. Wednesday’s decisions also ended all salaries or privileges for MPs, effectively closing down parliament indefinitely. The leader of Ennahda party, the biggest in the deeply-fragmented parliament and a leading member of successive governing coalitions, immediately rejected Saied’s announcements on Wednesday. The new decree stated that Tunisia’s president will continue to adhere to certain articles of the constitution but not those that conflict with the new legislative and executive provisions. The decision prompted immediate pushback from political rivals. Some jurists said the new decree effectively abolishes most of the articles of the 2014 constitution. The presidency said Saied would form a committee to amend the political system, but without offering details about the make-up of the body or its functioning. It also comes as Tunisia negotiates with the International Monetary Fund for its fourth bailout loan in ten years, likely to be made conditional on biting austerity measures that would inflict further pain on ordinary Tunisians.
But the decree pointed that the reforms should aim to “establish a truly democratic system where the people is the genuine holder of sovereignty and the source of powers which it exercises via elected MPs or through referendums.”
“The system should be founded on the separation of powers, effective balance between them and the consecration of the rule of law and guarantees individual and collective rights and freedoms,” it added. Saied, a political outsider, came to power in 2019 on a wave of public outrage against the political class widely seen as corrupt and opportunistic. An austere legal academic, the 63-year-old president has shown little inclination towards negotiation or dialogue with political parties or trade unions. But his moves enjoy the support of more than 70% of the population according to a recent poll, which showed also that more than 90% would vote for him if he ran again for president again.
Questions about the transition
While many Tunisians have welcomed his moves to strip MPs of their immunity, some worry his powers could easily go too far, without any checks and balances in the system. Tunisia had won praise abroad for its democratic transition but many citizens at home felt their quality of life has seriously deteriorated in the face of grinding economic, social and political crises, exacerbated by the ill-management of the coronavirus pandemic. Unemployment and poverty rates increased while economic growth rates dropped steadily compared to the situation before 2011 when street protests toppled the regime of the late President Zine El Abidine Ben Ali. The uncertainty is weighing on an economy already in tatters following a decade of political unrest and stalemate. This has been exacerbated by the coronavirus pandemic which has brought the health system to the edge of collapse and dealt a severe blow to the vital tourism sector.

Cold war escalates between Dbeibah government and Tobruk parliament
The Arab Weekly/September 23/2021
With the two parties in the showdown considering each other irrelevant to the political process, it will be very difficult to reach consensus on the legal bases for elections.
TRIPOLI--Libyan Prime Minister Abdulhamid Dbeibah pledged to bring down the Libyan House of Representatives, hours after the lower house of parliament announced that it had withdrawn its confidence in the government, and will, from now-on, consider the Dbeibah-led cabinet a caretaker government.
The move escalated the political showdown between the two internationally-recognised institutions and seemed to perpetuate the divide that has prevailed for several years between the east and west of the country.
Dbeibah said he would “continue his efforts to save the country,” refusing to recognise the Tobruk-based parliament’s vote of no confidence in his government. Addressing demonstrators, he said that parliament “will fall and will not be in this way representative of Libyans, and we will reach the elections and promise you that they will be free and fair.”Dbeibah described the speaker and members of the House of Representatives who voted to withdraw confidence in the Tripoli-based government as “obstructionists, who only want war and destruction.”
Dbeibah called on citizens from all over the country to demonstrate on Friday, in a move that indicates that the “cold war”, or the war of political statements and demonstrations between the two parties, will only worsen.
Parliament had backed the vote of no confidence in the Dbeibah government by a majority of 89 votes out of 113 who attended the Tuesday session, and called on the government to continue its work in a caretaker capacity until next elections. The vote took place after the prime minister and some ministers refused to appear before parliament and answer questions about the government budget and preparations for presidential and parliamentary elections.
The dispute revolves around the laws that are supposed to govern the elections. While the House of Representatives wants the next president to be elected through direct popular suffrage, pro-Turkish groups and Tripoli militias want the president to be elected by parliament, in a similar fashion to the vote that took place during the Political Dialogue Forum in Tunisia, last June. At the time, there were accusations levelled at Dbeibah that he tried to strike deals to buy delegates’ votes, which forced the United Nations to complete the dialogue sessions in Geneva.
While parliament approved the law on presidential elections, the “High Council of State” headed by pro-Islamist Khaled al-Mishri, though only a consultative body, has adopted an alternative electoral law. The situation may lead to the cancellation of the election date and end the UN mandate to the government, in a repeat of the conflict over legitimacy that pitted former premier Fayez al-Sarraj against the House of Representatives for five years.
The parliament’s move to withdraw confidence from the government did not receive the support of the United Nations Mission in Libya, which said, “The unity government will remain the legitimate administration until it is replaced through a regular process after the elections.”
It added that the House of Representatives must finalise the parliamentary elections law next week, “and refrain from any action that would undermine the electoral process and the country’s unity, security and stability.”
But the House of Representatives said since it had passed a confidence vote in the government last March, it has also the right to withdraw it now.
With the two parties in the showdown considering each other irrelevant to the political process, it will be very difficult to reach consensus on the legal bases and mechanisms for holding elections without external pressures.
Analysts say one of the main reasons for this new showdown is that Cairo’s efforts to settle differences did not achieve their desired results. Which puts the United Nations mission in front of the responsibility to ensure the needed consensus, or seek Cairo’s role, again.
On September 14, Egyptian President Abdel-Fattah al-Sisi received Parliament Speaker Aguila Saleh and the commander of the Libyan National Army, Field Marshal Khalifa Haftar, in the presence of the head of the Egyptian General Intelligence Service, Abbas Kamel, to discuss the help that can be provided to hold the Libyan general elections on their scheduled date of December 24. Dbeibah, who arrived in Cairo two days later, abstained from making any definitive pledges regarding the elections and focused in his discussions with President Sisi on the prospects for economic partnership between Egypt and Libya. Analysts saw this focus by Dbeibah as an attempt to buy Cairo’s tacit approval for his government’s stay in power or the postponement of the elections if consensus is not reached between the rival sides.

Russia records another 21,438 coronavirus cases, highest daily number since August 15
TASS/September 23/2021
Russia recorded 21,438 coronavirus cases in the past 24 hours, the highest daily number since August 15. The total number of cases has reached 7,354,995, the anti-coronavirus crisis center said on Thursday. Russia's coronavirus growth rate was 0.29%. In particular, 1,698 cases were reported in St. Petersburg in the past day, 936 in the Moscow region, 542 in the Samara region, 513 in the Sverdlovsk region and 502 in the Nizhny Novgorod region. There are currently 594,770 active coronavirus cases in Russia.

Morocco’s Akhannouch announces ‘cohesive’ government coalition
The Arab Weekly/September 23/2021
RABAT--Moroccan Prime Minister-designate and Secretary-General of the National Rally of Independents Aziz Akhannouch announced Wednesday that he will govern with a majority coalition that includes the Istiqlal Party, the Authenticity and Modernity Party and the National Rally of Independents.
The announcement came during a joint press conference in Rabat held by Akhannouch as well as Abdellatif Ouahbi, secretary-general of Authenticity and Modernity and Nizar Baraka, secretary-general of Al-Istiqlal. Akhannouch stressed the three parties’ keenness to form a “cohesive and effective” government to begin its work, saying, “these political formations have succeeded in convincing the voters. They are parties that share many historical bonds extending to the present and the future. Our electoral programmes also have a lot in common,” he pointed out.
Analysts say the parties share a commitment to a strong and harmonious government with a comprehensive vision and a desire for reform along the lines proposed by the king. But they have to take into account the difficult economic situation in Morocco following the pandemic.
The Istiqlal Party leader Nizar Baraka said the government majority is called upon to formulate a reform programme that combines the political planks of the three parties and tables in the aspirations of Moroccans.
“The coalition enjoys a comfortable and fairly consistent majority, according to the results of the elections, especially since the coalition proposals by the prime minister-designate Akhannouch were limited to the parties that topped the ballot,” said political scientist Charifa Lemouir.
Talking to The Arab Weekly, Lemouir indicated that “most of the responsibility is pinned on the names of the people that will be selected” to take part in the cabinet, which is “expected by voters to carry out their already announced electoral programmes.”At the end of his consultations with political parties, Akhannouch said that “the negotiations took place in an atmosphere of responsibility, according to a democratic methodology and within respect for the nation’s basics”. He added that “the names that will be proposed to the Moroccan monarch will be those of persons of competence, credibility and honesty.”Analysts believe limiting cabinet formation to three parties is likely to give the government coalition a level of harmony that was lacking in previous governments, at least those that were led by the Justice and Development (JDP) party for two successive terms. Mouir asserted that “Moroccans pin their hopes on the three parties on various levels, especially those related to economic and social dimensions and issues pertaining to freedoms.”Akhannouch’s government will have to meet many economic, social and political challenges, including those of economic recovery after the pandemic, job creation and the reform of the health and education sectors. The tripartite government coalition is based on a strong government majority of 271 parliamentary seats out of a total of 395. The coalition is led by the National Rally of Independents with 102 seats with the Authenticity and Modernity party’s 88 seats and Al-Istiqlal party with 81 seats. The remaining 124 seats will constitute the parliamentary opposition.

Hamas says no municipal elections unless general election is called
The Arab Weekly/September 23/2021
GAZA CITY, Palestinian Territories--Hamas, the Islamist group that runs Gaza, said Wednesday it would not participate in municipal Palestinians elections set by the Palestinian Authority for December unless a general election is also called.
Hamas is a long-standing rival of the PA, based in the occupied West Bank and had supported the decision to hold Palestinian legislative and presidential elections in May and July. But president Mahmoud Abbas in April indefinitely postponed those votes, which would have been the first Palestinian elections in 15 years. Abbas cited Israel’s refusal to guarantee voting in Israeli-annexed east Jerusalem, which Palestinians claim as their future capital. But Palestinian experts said Abbas balked out of fear that Hamas would sweep the polls, in a repeat of 2006 results that the president’s Fatah movement did not accept.
Hamas, which was furious by Abbas’s general election postponement, said Wednesday that it “would not be part of … fragmented municipal elections”. “The right solution is to hold comprehensive elections” for the Palestinian presidency, Palestinian legislative council, the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO), municipal bodies and trade and student unions, Hamas spokesman Hazem Qassem told reporters. Those votes could happen “simultaneously or according to a nationally agreed timetable,” he said. “If that is plan, we are ready to participate.” The municipal elections called by the PA would take place in 387 localities throughout the West Bank and Gaza on December 11 and thereafter in 90 other places at a later date that has yet to be set. Of the 477 voting sites, just 11 were in Gaza. A new Palestinian poll released Tuesday has found that nearly 80% of Palestinians want President Mahmoud Abbas to resign. The survey also found support for Abbas’ Hamas rivals remained high months after the 11-day Gaza war in May. It showed that 45% of Palestinians believe Hamas should lead and represent them, while only 19% said Abbas’ more secular Fatah deserved that role. Hamas’s rejection of the process would make voting impossible in Gaza, an Israeli-blockaded territory controlled by the Islamists since 2007. Hamas is considered a terrorist organisation by the United States and European Union but is seeking to bolster its legitimacy through election wins and by joining the PLO, a group of Palestinians factions recognised by Israel and the international community.

Hamas loses support base in Sudan as assets dismantled
Reuters/The Arab Weekly/September 23/2021
KHARTOUM--Sudanese authorities have taken control of lucrative assets that for years provided backing for Hamas, shedding light on how the country served as a haven for the Palestinian militant group under former ruler Omar al-Bashir. The takeover of at least a dozen companies that officials say were linked to Hamas has helped accelerate Sudan’s realignment with the West since Bashir’s overthrow in 2019. Over the past year, Khartoum has won removal from the US state sponsors of terrorism (SST) list and is on course for relief of more than $50 billion in debt. Hamas has lost a foreign base where members and supporters could live, raise money and channel Iranian weapons and funds to the Gaza Strip, Sudanese and Palestinian analysts said. Seized assets detailed by Sudanese official sources and a Western intelligence source show the reach of those networks. According to officials from a task force set up to dismantle the Bashir regime, they include real estate, company shares, a hotel in a prime Khartoum location, an exchange bureau, a TV station and more than a million acres of farmland. Sudan became a centre for money laundering and terrorism financing, said Wagdi Salih, a leading member of the task force, named the Committee to Dismantle the June 30, 1989 Regime and Retrieve Public Funds. The system was “a big cover, a big umbrella, internally and externally”, he said. A Western intelligence source said techniques were used in Sudan that are common to organised crime: companies were headed by trustee shareholders, rents collected in cash and transfers made through exchange bureaux. Bashir openly supported Hamas and was friendly with its leaders. “They got preferential treatment in tenders, tax forgiveness and they were allowed to transfer to Hamas and Gaza with no limits,” said a task force member, speaking on condition of anonymity.
Islamist Hub
Sudan’s journey from pariah state to US ally has been gradual. In the decade after Bashir took power in 1989 the country became a hub for radical Islamists, sheltered Osama bin Laden for several years and was sanctioned by the United States over links to Palestinian militants. Bashir later tried to distance himself from radical Islamists, stepping up security cooperation with Washington. In 2016 Sudan cut ties with Iran and the following year US trade sanctions against Khartoum were dropped after Washington accepted that state support for Hamas had ceased. But until Bashir’s fall, networks that had supported Hamas remained in place. Hamas investments in Sudan began with small-scale ventures such as fast food restaurants before venturing into real estate and construction, according to an official on the task force. An example was Hassan and Alabed, which started as a cement company and expanded into large real estate developments. The task force says it was in a network with about ten other large companies with interlinking share ownership connected to Bashir ally Abdelbasit Hamza that moved large sums through foreign bank accounts. The biggest was Alrowad Real Estate Development, established in 2007 and listed on Khartoum’s stock exchange, with subsidiaries that the Western intelligence source said laundered money and traded in currency to finance Hamas. Hamza was jailed in April for ten years on corruption charges and sent to the Khartoum prison where Bashir is being held. The task force said he had assets worth up to $1.2 billion in his name. Hamza’s lawyer, who also represents Bashir, could not be reached for comment. A second network, worth up to $20 million, revolved around the broadcaster Tayba and an associated charity named Almishkat. It was run by two Hamas members who obtained Sudanese citizenship and amassed businesses and real estate, according to Maher Abouljokh, the caretaker brought in to manage Tayba. The TV channel was funnelling money from the Gulf, laundered millions of dollars and had clear links to Hamas, said Abouljokh. Contacted by Reuters, Hamas official Sami Abu Zuhri denied the group had investments in Sudan, but acknowledged an impact from Sudan’s political shift: “Unfortunately, there were several measures that weakened the presence of the movement (Hamas) in the country (Sudan) and limited political ties with it,” he said.
Antithesis of Bashir
By last year, Sudan was desperate to escape the SST list, a prerequisite for debt relief and support from international lenders. Under pressure from the United States, it joined the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain and Morocco in agreeing to normalise ties with Israel, though it has moved slowly to implement the deal. A former US diplomat who worked on Sudan under the Trump administration said shutting down the Hamas network was a focus in negotiations with Khartoum. “We were pushing on an open door,” he said. The United States gave Sudan a list of companies to shut down, according to one Sudanese source and the Western intelligence source. The State Department declined to comment. Many Hamas-affiliated figures went to Turkey with some liquid assets but left behind about 80% of their investments, the task force official said. Sudan’s transitional leaders “consider themselves the exact antithesis of Bashir in regional terms,” said Sudanese analyst Magdi El Gazouli. “They want to sell themselves as a component of the new security order in the region.”“The coup against al-Bashir caused real problems for Hamas and Iran,” said Palestinian analyst Adnan Abu Amer. “Hamas and Iran had to look for alternatives, alternatives that had not been in place because the coup against al-Bashir was a sudden one.”

The Latest The Latest LCCC English analysis & editorials from miscellaneous sources published on September 23-24/2021
Unfriending Pakistan ...A reconsideration of the relationship is long overdue
Clifford D. May/The Washington Times/September 23/2021
Who’s to blame for America’s humiliating surrender in Afghanistan, the dishonorable abandonment of American citizens along with Afghans who sided with us against the Taliban and al Qaeda, the disgraceful treatment of NATO allies, and the lethal incompetence with which the retreat was carried out? The buck stops on the desk behind which Joe Biden sits. But we would be remiss to ignore the contributions of others to this historic fiasco. Prominent among them: Pakistan’s leaders.
I take no pleasure in saying this. I first visited Pakistan 38 years ago. Most of the people I encountered were gracious, hospitable, and tolerant. They were open to talking about anything – in English!
Of course, four years prior to my visit, angry mobs had stormed the American embassy in Islamabad, incensed over reports – entirely erroneous – that the U.S. had been involved in the seizure of the Grand Mosque in Mecca. But after that crisis passed, Muhamad Zia-ul-Haq – a four-star general who became the country’s president after deposing Prime Minister Zulfikar Ali Bhutto – was eager to improve relations with the U.S.
I attended a small dinner he hosted. His eyes were as dark and predatory as a shark’s. But he didn’t seem like a bad guy – as dictators go.
He was then providing a haven for a flood of refugees from Afghanistan where Soviet forces were supporting a communist government at war with Muslim guerrillas. Both Washington and Islamabad favored the guerrillas who, most Americans believed, were throwing off a foreign occupation, not launching a new global jihad against infidels and heretics.
Nevertheless, over the five years that followed, President Zia would establish Sharia laws and courts, appoint Islamists to senior government posts, restrict the rights of women and religious minorities, criminalize “blasphemy,” and add whipping, stoning, and amputation to the list of punishments meted out to those deemed miscreants.
My last visit to Pakistan was in 2009. During the less than two weeks I was there, four terrorist attacks were carried out inside the country. One, attributed to the Pakistani Taliban, targeted the equivalent of the Pentagon. Armed with automatic weapons, grenades, and rocket launchers, the terrorists fought for 22 hours. Hostages were taken, and a brigadier, a colonel, and three commandos were reportedly killed.
The reaction of many Pakistanis struck me as shockingly blasé. And even some of those who condemned attacks by the Pakistani Taliban against Pakistanis condoned attacks by the Afghan Taliban against Americans.
Suspicion was already growing that al Qaeda’s central leadership, possibly including Osama bin Laden, was hiding out in Pakistan. I had noted that in a column and, on a television program, was scolded by the host for having done so.
Those suspicions were borne out, of course. And we now know for certain that powerful elements within Pakistan’s military and intelligence establishment helped create the Afghan Taliban in the early 1990s and continued to fund and train its fighters even after the U.S. intervention in 2001. The Taliban’s close alliance with al Qaeda apparently troubled them not at all.
Author Elliot Ackerman, who served as a Marine in Afghanistan, is hardly alone in believing that had Pakistani leaders ended that support and shut the border to the Taliban – whose leaders retreated to Pakistani bases every winter – the organization would have “collapsed” rather than soldiering on until American leaders grew tired and quit – the outcome the jihadis both expected and predicted.
Pakistani leaders continue to support Islamic supremacists and jihadis of various stripes. Former Pakistani Ambassador Husain Haqqani, now a scholar at the Hudson Institute, has written: “While Pakistan’s establishment has alternated between various Islamist factions, mainstreaming one while suppressing another, it has never thought about mainstreaming secularists who have been dubbed as traitors or unfaithful to the ideology of Pakistan.”
The “international community,” rhetorically committed to nuclear non-proliferation, failed to prevent Pakistan from detonating a nuclear weapon in 1998, the same year al Qaeda bombed two American embassies in Africa and bin Laden issued his infamous fatwa: “The rule to kill Americans and their allies – civilians and military – is a sacred duty for any Muslim.” Pakistani physicist A. Q. Khan, father of Islamabad’s illicit nuclear arsenal, illicitly transferred nuclear technology to Iran, Libya, and North Korea. Many Pakistanis regard him as a hero.
Following President Biden’s “unconditional surrender to an amorphous armed rabble” – as Indian journalist Shekhar Gupta aptly phrased it – Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan declared “the shackles of slavery” broken. The head of Pakistan’s powerful Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) agency, Lt. Gen. Faiz Hameed, was welcomed by the Taliban in Kabul. Pakistani Foreign Minister Shah Mahmoud Qureshi paid a call on Ebrahim Raisi, the new president of the Islamic Republic of Iran.
Though designated a “major non-NATO ally,” Pakistan maintains a close alliance with Beijing, and its military has links with the People’s Liberation Army. Nevertheless, between 2002 and 2018, the U.S. government gave Pakistan more than $33 billion in assistance.
The Trump administration cut aid to Pakistan, but a broader reconsideration of this disappointing relationship is long overdue. I know it’s tricky: We don’t want to push Islamabad closer to America’s sworn enemies. But if Pakistan’s leaders have decided that their interests are best served as clients of China (ignoring Beijing’s persecution of the Muslims of Xinjiang), allies of Tehran’s imperialist jihadis, and supporters of the Taliban, al Qaeda, and other Islamist terrorists, this marriage cannot be saved.
President Biden inherited a long list of mistakes, misjudgments, and unfinished business from his predecessors. But, as noted, he currently occupies an office that contains a desk from which bucks can be passed no further.
Clifford D. May is founder and president of the Foundation for Defense of Democracies (FDD) and a columnist for the Washington Times. Follow him on Twitter @CliffordDMay. FDD is a Washington, DC-based, non-partisan research institute focusing on national security and foreign policy.

Iran Joining the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation
Bradley Bowman/Ryan Brobst/Zane Zovak/FDD-Policy Brief//September 23/2021
Members of the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation (SCO) unanimously agreed on Friday to elevate Iran to full membership. The Islamic Republic of Iran’s entry into the SCO strengthens Tehran’s relationships with China and Russia and demonstrates the need for more unity among Israel, the United States, and its Arab partners about the challenges coming from China.
The SCO was formed in 2001 as an intergovernmental organization dedicated to addressing political, economic, and security issues across Eurasia. China and Russia dominate the SCO, whose member states also include India, Pakistan, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, and Uzbekistan. Diverse security priorities and tensions among members, exacerbated by the addition of India and Pakistan in 2017, mean that the SCO functions more like a diplomatic forum than a unified security bloc.
Despite these limitations, Iran’s SCO membership underscores Tehran’s desire to build a deep and comprehensive partnership with the People’s Republic of China. Under Iran’s “Look to the East” foreign policy, Tehran sees China as its main long-term partner. Earlier this year, Iran and China signed a 25-year strategic partnership that will see China invest several hundred million dollars in Iranian projects, including nuclear power, energy development, and infrastructure. A leaked draft of the partnership agreement called for combined Chinese-Iranian military exercises, weapons development, and intelligence sharing. The final terms of the agreement remain secret.
The Islamic Republic has also been improving its relationship with the SCO’s other key power, Russia. Tehran has agreed to hold joint military exercises with Moscow and Beijing in late 2021 or early 2022, building on trilateral naval exercises in the Indian Ocean and the Gulf of Oman in late 2019.
Although it could take approximately two years to finalize the legal process of Iranian accession to the SCO, Iran’s acceptance by the body’s members reinforces the importance of enhanced cooperation between the United States and its allies and partners in the Middle East.
In particular, the growing political, military, and economic ties between Tehran and Beijing should ring multiple alarm bells in Washington, Jerusalem, and a number of Arab capitals.
Some Americans have wittingly or unwittingly consoled themselves with the vague notion that great power competition happens only in Europe and East Asia, allowing the United States to ignore the Middle East. As Iran’s SCO membership shows, China and Russia compete in the Middle East, too.
They have a better grasp of the region’s continuing importance.
That reality must inform Washington’s thinking when it comes to the U.S. military posture in the region. It may just be a matter of time until Iran builds or acquires (with Beijing’s or Moscow’s help) some of the same formidable anti-access and area-denial weapons that China and Russia are already fielding. The partnership could provide Tehran, for example, more advanced air defense, missile, cyber, anti-satellite, and electronic warfare capabilities.
The growing military and economic integration between Beijing and Tehran also forces Jerusalem, Riyadh, Abu Dhabi, and others to assume that technology shared with China may find its way to Tehran. Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates should be more sympathetic to concerns regarding their own growing arms purchases from Beijing. The increasingly close economic and military links between China and Iran should also help solidify a growing consensus between Washington and Jerusalem regarding the potency of the Chinese military-civil fusion threat and the need to protect shared technology that may have military applications.
While Iran’s accession to the SCO is distressing, if Washington, Jerusalem, Riyadh, Abu Dhabi, and others draw the right lessons and increase their cooperation, it may turn out to be a blessing in disguise.
Bradley Bowman is senior director of the Center on Military and Political Power (CMPP) at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies (FDD), where Ryan Brobst and Zane Zovak are research analysts. They also contribute to FDD’s Iran Program and China Program. For more analysis from the authors, CMPP, and the Iran and China programs, please subscribe HERE. Follow Bradley on Twitter @Brad_L_Bowman. Follow FDD on Twitter @FDD and @FDD_CMPP and @FDD_Iran. FDD is a Washington, DC-based, nonpartisan research institute focusing on national security and foreign policy.

The Squalid "Squad" Is Trying to Destroy Bipartisan Support for Israel
Alan M. Dershowitz/September 23/2021
The fact that the Squad picked on the Iron Dome to make its stand against Israel is significant. The Iron Dome is a system developed jointly by the United States and Israel that is purely defensive. It does not kill, injure, or threaten anyone. It only protects civilians against war crimes committed by terrorist groups that direct lethal rockets against innocent civilians.
The fact that the Squad would try to deny Israel the right to defend its civilians speaks volumes about the lack of morality and decency among Squad members and their allies.
It follows from this effort that the Squad will oppose any and all aid to Israel, including protecting its innocent civilians against Iran's nuclear threat. The obvious goal of Squad members is to deny Israel the right to defend itself against aggression. At least one of its members has denied that Israel has the right to exist.
These bigoted actions directly violate the platform of the Democratic Party (as well as that of the Republican Party). The Democratic Party must decide whether it will become captive to its most extreme wing or whether it will marginalize these radicals who are not only anti-Israel but, in many ways, anti-American. They are intolerant of dissent and due process for those who disagree with them. They are anti-police, anti-military, and anti-free market economy.
The time has come, indeed it is long past, for the Democratic leadership to stand strong against the anti-American, anti-Israel and anti-decency squalid Squad. The leadership can no longer stand idly by the bigotry of their members. If they persist in tolerating the intolerable, they will lose the support of the all-important mainstream voters.
The "Squad" is a small group of radical members of the U.S. House of Representatives who run for Congress under the banner of the Democratic Party but do not reflect its mainstream policies. The fact that the Squad would try to deny Israel the right to defend its civilians speaks volumes about the lack of morality and decency among Squad members and their allies. Pictured: Four members of the Squad, from left to right, Rashida Tlaib (D-MI), Ayanna Pressley (D-MA), Ilhan Omar (D-MN) and Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-NY) at the U.S. Capitol on July 15, 2019. (Photo by Alex Wroblewski/Getty Images)
The "Squad" is a small group of radical members of the U.S. House of Representatives who run for Congress under the banner of the Democratic Party but do not reflect its mainstream policies. They represent niche districts that are not typical of the Democratic base. They could not be elected in any statewide race, because they lack widespread support. They were nominated because of low turnout in primaries and were elected because their districts are overwhelmingly Democrat. They are fringe Democrats who should not have influence beyond their districts. But the House leadership of the Democratic Party has exaggerated their significance and given them more power than they deserve.
One important issue that distinguishes them from mainstream Democrats is their knee-jerk hatred of Israel and their willingness to deny America's most important Middle East ally the means to defend its civilians against rocket attacks from terrorist organizations such as Hamas and Hezbollah, as well as from Iran's nuclear program. At least one member of the Squad is an overt anti-Semite who has repeatedly made bigoted statements against American Jews. Instead of being marginalized for these outrageous canards, she was rewarded by the Democratic leadership by being given a plum assignment as a member the House Foreign Affairs Committee.
Now the Squad has managed to extort the leadership into removing a billion-dollar commitment to replenish Israel's Iron Dome defense system that protects civilians from rocket attacks. The Squad, and its Democrat allies in the House, threatened to vote against an appropriation bill unless the Iron Dome allocation was removed. And they won — at least for now. The allocation was removed over the objection of mainstream Democrats and Republicans, and the Squad claimed victory.
Although the victory was largely pyrrhic — the Iron Dome funding is likely to be restored in subsequent legislation — the success of the Squad's sordid maneuver may be a sign of their growing influence in the Democratic Party.
The fact that the Squad picked on the Iron Dome to make its stand against Israel is significant. The Iron Dome is a system developed jointly by the United States and Israel that is purely defensive. It does not kill, injure, or threaten anyone. It only protects civilians against war crimes committed by terrorist groups that direct lethal rockets against innocent civilians. The fact that the Squad would try to deny Israel the right to defend its civilians speaks volumes about the lack of morality and decency among Squad members and their allies. It follows from this effort that the Squad will oppose any and all aid to Israel, including protecting its innocent civilians against Iran's nuclear threat. The obvious goal of Squad members is to deny Israel the right to defend itself against aggression. At least one of its members has denied that Israel has the right to exist.
These bigoted actions directly violate the platform of the Democratic Party (as well as that of the Republican Party). The Democratic Party must decide whether it will become captive to its most extreme wing or whether it will marginalize these radicals who are not only anti-Israel but, in many ways, anti-American. They are intolerant of dissent and due process for those who disagree with them. They are anti-police, anti-military, and anti-free market economy. Their vision of America and the world is out of sync with most Democrats and independents. Up until recently, they could be largely ignored by voters as a loud but ineffective distraction. But now that they have managed to influence legislation in so negative a manner, they must be taken seriously by voters and rejected.
Quite understandably, Republican leaders are trying to capitalize on the Democrats' capitulation to these extremists. They are claiming that they represent the future of the Democratic Party. If that were true, it would mark the demise of the two-party system, since mainstream American voters — who generally determine the outcome of contested general elections, as distinguished from primaries — do not support radical extremism. The Democratic leadership must make it clear that they reject the policies, attitudes and statements of the squad. They cannot get in bed with them. The time has come, indeed it is long past, for the Democratic leadership to stand strong against the anti-American, anti-Israel and anti-decency squalid Squad. The leadership can no longer stand idly by the bigotry of their members. If they persist in tolerating the intolerable, they will lose the support of the all-important mainstream voters. I know because I am one of them.
*Alan M. Dershowitz is the Felix Frankfurter Professor of Law, Emeritus at Harvard Law School and served on the legal team representing President Donald Trump for the first Senate impeachment trial. He is the author of numerous books, including "Guilt by Accusation: The Challenge of Proving Innocence in the Age of #MeToo" and "The Case Against the New Censorship: Protecting Free Speech from Big Tech, Progressives and Universities." His podcast, "The Dershow," is available on Spotify and YouTube. He is the Jack Roth Charitable Foundation Fellow at Gatestone Institute.
© 2021 Gatestone Institute. All rights reserved. The articles printed here do not necessarily reflect the views of the Editors or of Gatestone Institute. No part of the Gatestone website or any of its contents may be reproduced, copied or modified, without the prior written consent of Gatestone Institute.

We May Have Left Afghanistan, Mr. President, But We Are Still at War
Pete Hoekstra/Gatestone Institute/September 23/2021
I never liked that term, "war on terror." Terrorism is a tactic; it is not the enemy we fought every day. The term has done more to confuse us than enlighten us.
[O]ne can see why the phrase "war on terror" became the widely accepted nomenclature. It was neutral. Gone would be the difficult references connecting the terrorist movement to Islam and Muslims. The need to define good Muslims versus bad/extremist Muslims would be eliminated. We would just paper over the difficult discussions that needed to take place but did not.
The terrorists, and their Islamist apologists in the West, actually used our response to their benefit. They widely labeled those who tried to connect al-Qaeda and other terrorist organizations to Islamic dogma as Islamophobes and anti-Muslim.
It did not matter that the terrorists invoked Quranic passages as justification, or that groups such as ISIS and others explicitly state that their ultimate objective is a global Muslim state governed by religious law.
President Biden can say what he wants but that does not mean it is so. The other side has a say in this. And as we saw as we were leaving Kabul, the jihadists spoke clearly, they are still at war with us. If the crack team of foreign advisers that the president is relying on, Secretary of State Antony Blinken, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Mark Milley, and Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin, advised him that the United States is no longer at war, the world is in serious trouble.
On Tuesday, Joe Biden presented his first UN General Assembly speech as president, and proclaimed: "I stand here today for the first time in 20 years with the United States not at war." It was an odd boast, considering how the United States left Afghanistan and what it means for the future.
On Tuesday, Joe Biden presented his first United Nations General Assembly speech as president. I labored through almost 32 minutes of the speech when a most profound announcement was proclaimed: "I stand here today for the first time in 20 years with the United States not at war."
It was an odd boast, considering how the United States left Afghanistan and what it means for the future.
Our retreat from the Afghanistan battlefield left behind thousands of friends and allies and billions of dollars' worth of equipment.
We were never at war with Afghanistan. Our enemy was – and continues to be – individuals who take inspiration from a strict interpretation of Islam and employ terrorist tactics to press their cause.
Politically, we left the country as we found it – led by the same Islamist radicals who controlled the country 20 years ago. Despite what the Taliban might say, U.S. intelligence estimates that al-Qaeda could be fully reconstituted in Afghanistan in a year or two.
What happens after that? The president's UN speech did not look forward. If anything, his inaccurate statement that we are no longer at war anywhere in the world indicated his belief that the war on terrorism is over.
I never liked that term, "war on terror." Terrorism is a tactic; it is not the enemy we fought every day. The term has done more to confuse us than enlighten us. Nine days after the 9/11 attacks, President George W. Bush told Congress that those who attacked us were:
"a collection of loosely affiliated terrorist organizations known as al-Qaeda." It "is to terror what the Mafia is to crime."
"terrorists (who) practice a fringe form of Islamic extremism."
"a fringe movement that perverts the peaceful teachings of Islam."
"traitors to their own faith, trying, in effect, to hijack Islam itself."
Bush recognized that he had to put some context with the word terrorist so that the world would better understand the threat we were facing as well as the tactics that they would employ.
"Our war on terror begins with al-Qaeda," he said, "but it does not end there. It will not end until every terrorist group of global reach has been found, stopped and defeated."
We are still a long way from that goal, which means the threat to the homeland endures.
Reflecting on Bush's speech, one can see why the phrase "war on terror" became the widely accepted nomenclature. It was neutral. Gone would be the difficult references connecting the terrorist movement to Islam and Muslims. The need to define good Muslims versus bad/extremist Muslims would be eliminated. We would just paper over the difficult discussions that needed to take place but did not.
The terrorists, and their Islamist apologists in the West, actually used our response to their benefit. They widely labeled those who tried to connect al-Qaeda and other terrorist organizations to Islamic dogma as Islamophobes and anti-Muslim.
It did not matter that the terrorists invoked Quranic passages as justification, or that groups such as ISIS and others explicitly state that their ultimate objective is a global Muslim state governed by religious law.
For much of the last 20 years, the lack of clarity as to who the enemy was and why they attacked us has eluded us. It has made it difficult to focus on what needed to be done and what victory might look like.
So barely a month after the U.S.'s disgraceful disengagement in Afghanistan, the president of the United States can declare that we are not at war. Words have meaning. The president cannot just declare that the war on terror is over and walk away. The enemy still exists. Those individuals described by President Bush in 2001 are still out there. Today, they are reinvigorated by their perceived success in Afghanistan. They are better equipped than any terrorist organization in the world because of what was left behind in Afghanistan, and they continue to be inspired by their view of the religion they are attempting to hijack, Islam.
No, President Biden can say what he wants but that does not mean it is so. The other side has a say in this. And as we saw as we were leaving Kabul, the jihadists spoke clearly, they are still at war with us. If the crack team of foreign advisers that the president is relying on, Secretary of State Antony Blinken, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Mark Milley, and Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin, advised him that the United States is no longer at war, the world is in serious trouble.
The jihadists have not surrendered; they have not gone away. As a matter of fact, the world is a much more dangerous place than what it was just a few short months ago. The jihadists will be back. When they strike us again, let us hope that our leaders provide the necessary clarity this time around to identify the enemy and defeat them once and for all.
Ambassador Pete Hoekstra (retired), served 18 years in Congress and was Chairman of the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence from 2004-07. He is a Senior Fellow with the Investigative Project on Terrorism.
© 2021 Gatestone Institute. All rights reserved. The articles printed here do not necessarily reflect the views of the Editors or of Gatestone Institute. No part of the Gatestone website or any of its contents may be reproduced, copied or modified, without the prior written consent of Gatestone Institute.

How U.S. Failure in Afghanistan Validates the Koran’s Jihadist Teachings
Raymond Ibrahim/September 23/2021
While it should be a no-brainer that the Taliban’s victory in Afghanistan has emboldened like-minded (read: “radical”) Muslims to no end, few in the West appreciate how this episode—especially America’s disastrous retreat under Biden—is being used to validate the Koran itself, and thus reignite Muslim zeal and faith in Islam.
Since August 15, 2021, when the Taliban reconquered Afghanistan, anytime I watched an Arabic language program or sheikh speak, they cited several Koran verses as “proof” that it was only inevitable—only a matter of time—that the U.S. would be humiliated and the Taliban exalted.
Consider, as one example, the words of popular sheikh, Wagdi Ghoneim. An Egyptian scholar of Islam and member of the Muslim Brotherhood, he is notorious for issuing violent fatwas against Israel and inciting hatred against other “infidels” (including by threatening Egypt’s indigenous Christian minority, the Copts with genocide). With such “credentials,” it should come as no surprise that he once served as the imam of the Islamic Institute of Orange County, California, and was a fundraiser for the Toledo, Ohio charity, KindHearts (a Hamas front).
On August 15, 2021, this Ghoneim offered a “victory” speech that—at least as of publication of this article—still appears on YouTube, titled (in translation), “Allahu Akbar: The Taliban’s Victory Represents the Power of Jihad in Allah’s Way.” He began his talk by quoting the Koran on the virtues of jihad, for example:
O believers! Be mindful of Allah and seek what brings you closer to him and perform jihad in his way, so you may be successful (5:35).
O believers! March forth [into battle] whether it is easy or difficult for you, and perform jihad with your wealth and your lives in the cause of Allah. That is best for you, if only you knew (9:41).
Having laid the doctrinal framework for jihad, Ghoneim moved on to its most important aspect—perseverance: “The Taliban persevered in its jihad for 20 years,” he stressed. “This isn’t a problem—what’s 20 years in the context of history? Who said [the outcome of] jihad is instantaneous? No! It requires patience and time!”
In fact, patience and perseverance in the jihad was his grand point—not to mention the grand takeaway lesson of Afghanistan for all Muslims. It is for Allah to decree when the jihad succeeds; for every day Muslims, there duty is simply and always to wage it. If they do so, Allah, according to his word, shall eventually bless them with victory.
Supporting Koran verses Ghoneim cited include,
We will certainly test you until we learn who among you are the true mujahidin [jihadists] who remain steadfast and how you conduct yourselves (47:31).
Do you think you will enter Paradise without Allah proving which of you truly performed jihad for his cause and patiently endured? (3:142).
O believers! Patiently endure, persevere, stand on guard, and be mindful of Allah, that you may be successful (3:200).
Interestingly, the phrase “stand on guard” in Koran 3:200 literally means “perform ribat,” that is, man the frontier zone, whence the infidels should be harried, including through guerilla tactics—precisely what the Taliban did.
Finally, Ghoneim moved onto Allah’s words concerning infidels, especially those who try to prevent Muslims from performing jihad and enforcing sharia; he quoted Koran 8:36: “Surely the infidels spend their wealth to prevent others from the Way of Allah [sabil allah, i.e., jihad]. They will continue to spend to the point of regret. Then they will be defeated and the infidels will be driven into hell.”
As countless other Muslim clerics and leaders have done, are doing, and will do for years to come, Ghoneim proceeded to expound how that particular Koran verse foretold America’s defeat—that is, so long as there were always Muslims willing to persevere in the jihad, namely the Taliban. At one point he descended into wild gloating: “See how much they lost by way of dead and wounded—and trillions, all lost!… So you see, trillions they have lost!”
Because Ghoneim made this video on August 15, when it was still unknown that billions of dollars’ worth of U.S. weapons had fallen into the hands of the Taliban, he did not mention it—though countless other clerics have since, citing it as proof of how Allah blesses his jihadist servants, while humiliating their infidel enemies.
At any rate, the take away lesson from Afghanistan for millions of Muslims the world over is that perseverance in jihad and patience pays off—just as the Koran says it will. Put differently, the roles of both the Taliban and the U.S. have now confirmed for Muslims the truths of the Koran, specifically, that perseverance in the jihad always leads to victory over and leaves infidels broken—even if it takes years and decades.
“Therefore, thanks be to Allah,” concluded Ghoneim, “that they [Taliban] were patient and steadfast, and Allah rewarded them with victory over the infidel nations.” He closed by supplicating Allah to let the umma, the entire Muslim world, learn from the Taliban—from “those heroes who raised all of our heads up high and cast the infidels’ heads down in shame.”
As such, expect a renewed and unwavering commitment to the jihad—in all its manifestations, violent and nonviolent—in the foreseeable future.

د. ماجد رفي زاده: يجب على العالم أن يتحرك بشكل عاجل لمنع إيران من امتلاك سلاح نووي
World must act urgently to deny Iran a nuclear weapon
Dr. Majid Rafizadeh /Arab News/September 23/2021
http://eliasbejjaninews.com/archives/102702/dr-majid-rafizadeh-world-must-act-urgently-to-deny-iran-a-nuclear-weapon-%d8%af-%d9%85%d8%a7%d8%ac%d8%af-%d8%b1%d9%81%d9%8a-%d8%b2%d8%a7%d8%af%d9%87-%d9%8a%d8%ac%d8%a8-%d8%b9%d9%84%d9%89-%d8%a7/
The latest developments indicate that the Iranian regime is heading toward becoming a nuclear state, which will have significant repercussions for regional and global peace and security.
The regime is pressing ahead with uranium enrichment and is infringing all the terms of the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action nuclear deal. The regime is reportedly only one month away from having enough material to fuel a single nuclear weapon, while Iranian leaders are showing no interest in returning to the negotiating table to revive the nuclear pact. As the International Atomic Energy Agency reported this month: “Since 23 February 2021, the agency’s verification and monitoring activities have been seriously undermined as a result of Iran’s decision to stop the implementation of its nuclear-related commitments.”
The dangers of a nuclear-armed Iran must not be underestimated for several reasons.
First of all, Iran is not a rational state; rather it is a revolutionary one. Its theocratic establishment is anchored in prioritizing the pursuit of its revolutionary ideals, which include exporting its system of governance to other countries. This policy of exporting its revolution to other nations has been consistent throughout the four-decade history of the regime. Since 1979, by deploying its Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps and its elite branch the Quds Force, the Iranian leaders have managed to expand Tehran’s influence throughout the Middle East, including from Iraq to Yemen, through its proxy groups such as the Houthis, Hezbollah and the Popular Mobilization Units, a conglomerate of more than 40 militia groups in Iraq.
Imagine how much more empowered and emboldened the Iranian regime would become in pursuing its revolutionary principles, interfering in the domestic affairs of other nations and supporting its militia groups across the Middle East if it possessed nuclear weapons.
Secondly, there exists the dangerous likelihood of nuclear weapons falling into the hands of Iran’s proxy and militia groups, along with the threat that the Iranian regime will share its nuclear technology with its proxies and state allies such as the Syrian regime.
It is worth noting that the Iranian regime has already set up weapons factories abroad and is manufacturing advanced ballistic missiles in foreign countries, including in Syria. These include precision-guided missiles that can strike specific targets. Iran’s foreign-based weapons factories give it an advantageous military capability for waging wars or striking other nations.
The policy of exporting its revolution to other nations has been consistent throughout the history of the Iranian regime.
Since the regime is already supplying advanced weapons to its proxies, what would stop the regime from sharing its nuclear technology with them in order to empower them and undermine other nations’ national security interests? For example, the latest UN annual report revealed that the Houthis are receiving a significant number of weapons from Iran. It stated: “An increasing body of evidence suggests that individuals or entities in Iran supply significant volumes of weapons and components to the Houthis.”
Iran’s weapons are already being deployed for offensive purposes by its proxies. For example, Houthi forces launched a drone at a military airbase in the southern Saudi city of Khamis Mushayt in April. The Yemeni militia also reportedly launched more than 40 drones and missiles at Saudi Arabia in February alone. Previously, the Houthis claimed responsibility for the 2019 attacks on two Saudi Aramco plants at the heart of the Kingdom’s oil industry — the world’s biggest oil processing facility at Abqaiq near Dammam and the country’s second-largest oilfield at Khurais.
The third threat is linked to the fact the Iranian regime is the world’s top state sponsor of terrorism. For example, one of its diplomats, Assadollah Assadi, was sentenced to 20 years in prison in Belgium for his role in a failed 2018 terrorist bomb plot in Paris, in which a “Free Iran” rally was targeted. Iran also dispatches troops and uses undercover agents — in academia, the foreign service or by obtaining visas under the cover of academic research or tourism — to gather intelligence for, help arm or otherwise assist militia groups. Several countries, including Kuwait, have detained Iranians who were trying to infiltrate their country. And Tehran also uses its foreign embassies, cultural centers and diplomats to act as cells to organize and construct terror groups. A 2017 Supreme Court ruling in Kuwait revealed how Iran’s embassy there had played a role in forming terror cells. Iran’s ambassador and diplomats were subsequently expelled.
The international community must immediately act to prevent Tehran from obtaining nuclear weapons, as the world cannot live in peace — and it will undoubtedly become a much more dangerous place — with a nuclear-armed Iran.
• Dr. Majid Rafizadeh is a Harvard-educated Iranian-American political scientist. Twitter: @Dr_Rafizadeh

AUKUS deal could strengthen Iran’s nuclear ambitions
Dnyanesh Kamat/The Arab Weekly/September 23/2021
Like the Afghan withdrawal before it, the AUKUS deal is part of the Biden administration’s sharp and sudden foreign policy moves as the US attempts to emerge on top at the end of what is likely to be a period of prolonged geopolitical turbulence.
The AUKUS deal announced between Australia, Britain and the United States, despite its purported focus on the Indo-Pacific, will also impact the Middle East and South Asia. The deal, a consequence of the emerging bipolar competition between the US and China, will see Iran capitalise on the arrangement to further its nuclear goals. For if Australia can have more nuclear materials, so can Iran, Tehran will likely argue. And from there, a new nuclear arms race is set to get off and running.
The AUKUS deal, which envisages the provision of at least eight nuclear-powered submarines to Australia through technology transfer by Britain and the US, uses a rarely-utilised loophole in the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT). This allows non-nuclear-weapon states to divert fissile material away from International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) inspection if it is used for “peaceful” purposes, such as in submarine propulsion. Most states that possess nuclear weapons today developed the capability under the initial pretext of peaceful purposes, such as electricity generation, research and, yes, nuclear propulsion.
Indeed, Israel, which is widely believed to possess nuclear weapons, conducts “research” at its nuclear reactor near the city of Dimona.
The typical amount of highly-enriched uranium required to make one nuclear weapon is approximately 25 kilogrammes. The amount likely to be transferred to Australia for its submarines will be anywhere between 100 and 200 times that amount. That this will be outside IAEA surveillance is breathtaking.
Now, the AUKUS deal gives Tehran a useful propaganda tool to justify its increased uranium enrichment. Iran’s ex-foreign minister, Javad Zarif, has already criticized America and Britain for the exception made for Australia, which like Iran is also a signatory of the NPT. Iranian members of parliament have also begun to question the credibility of the IAEA, which monitors (when it can) Tehran’s adherence to its NPT safeguard agreement and the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action, also known as the Iran nuclear deal. Under the current hardline regime, Iran may simply walk out of the NPT, like North Korea did in the early 2000s, and then, like Israel (also not a member of the NPT), maintain strategic ambiguity on the question of whether it has nuclear weapons.
If the AUKUS deal catalyzes Iranian nuclear expansion, what will the Israeli response be? Israel, while tentatively aligning itself with the Biden administration’s plan of pursuing a multi-pronged strategy to prevent Tehran from developing a nuclear weapon, has left open the option of military strikes on Iranian nuclear facilities. Any Israeli attack on Iranian nuclear facilities will be catastrophic for the region. For starters, some of Iran’s nuclear plants are in its south, close to the waters of the Gulf. Radioactive fallout will affect every state in proximity. In return, Iran’s proxy militias could likely wreak havoc on Israel. This could overwhelm Israel’s Iron Dome missile-defense system.
Iran’s proxies may even target Israel’s nuclear reactors in return. This summer, a missile fired by Syrian forces against an Israeli airstrike landed 30km from the nuclear reactor in Dimona. Tehran has also put America’s Gulf allies on notice should it be the target of Israeli attacks. This will sink whatever is left of the nuclear deal and wreck whatever little chance of a grand detente that emerged at the recent Middle East summit held in Baghdad and attended by almost all regional states. If it seemed that America’s withdrawal from the Middle East to focus on its pivot to Asia would have brought a semblance of peace to the region, it now appears that with the AUKUS deal the opposite could be true.
In South Asia, Beijing could do an AUKUS-type deal of its own with Pakistan, with which it already has extensive cooperation in nuclear matters. This will be payback by Beijing to counter India, which Washington has, over the past few years, tried assiduously to rope into an anti-China alliance. This could impact the conventional balance of power between Pakistan and India and could force New Delhi to alter its nuclear doctrine.
Last year, India’s defence minister, Rajnath Singh, hinted that India might change its no-first-use of nuclear weapons policy. If this were to happen, it could set off a renewed nuclear arms race in South Asia. It could even force Beijing to alter its no-first-use policy, setting off a domino effect that will impact the strategic calculations of all nuclear weapons states. India has for long been trying to hedge between the US and China. It sent troops to Russia’s recently held Zapad military exercises in Belarus and is a full member of the China-led Shanghai Cooperation Organisation, along with Pakistan. Yet if Beijing responds to AUKUS in kind by shoring up Pakistan’s military, this could force Delhi’s hand to further strengthen its alliance with the US. Like the Afghan withdrawal before it, the AUKUS deal is part of the Biden administration’s sharp and sudden foreign policy moves as the US attempts to emerge on top at the end of what is likely to be a period of prolonged geopolitical turbulence. Countries of the Middle East and South Asia should brace themselves. Copyright: Syndication Bureau