LCCC ENGLISH DAILY NEWS BULLETIN
February 01/2018
Compiled & Prepared by: Elias Bejjani

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Bible Quotations
Many live as enemies of the cross of Christ. Their destiny is destruction, their god is their stomach, and their glory is in their shame. Their mind is set on earthly things
Philippians03/01-21/:Further, my brothers and sisters, rejoice in the Lord! It is no trouble for me to write the same things to you again, and it is a safeguard for you.  Watch out for those dogs, those evildoers, those mutilators of the flesh. For it is we who are the circumcision, we who serve God by his Spirit, who boast in Christ Jesus, and who put no confidence in the flesh— though I myself have reasons for such confidence. If someone else thinks they have reasons to put confidence in the flesh, I have more:  circumcised on the eighth day, of the people of Israel, of the tribe of Benjamin, a Hebrew of Hebrews; in regard to the law, a Pharisee;  as for zeal, persecuting the church; as for righteousness based on the law, faultless. But whatever were gains to me I now consider loss for the sake of Christ.  What is more, I consider everything a loss because of the surpassing worth of knowing Christ Jesus my Lord, for whose sake I have lost all things. I consider them garbage, that I may gain Christ  and be found in him, not having a righteousness of my own that comes from the law, but that which is through faith in Christ—the righteousness that comes from God on the basis of faith. I want to know Christ—yes, to know the power of his resurrection and participation in his sufferings, becoming like him in his death,  and so, somehow, attaining to the resurrection from the dead. Not that I have already obtained all this, or have already arrived at my goal, but I press on to take hold of that for which Christ Jesus took hold of me. Brothers and sisters, I do not consider myself yet to have taken hold of it. But one thing I do: Forgetting what is behind and straining toward what is ahead, I press on toward the goal to win the prize for which God has called me heavenward in Christ Jesus. Following Paul’s Example All of us, then, who are mature should take such a view of things. And if on some point you think differently, that too God will make clear to you.  Only let us live up to what we have already attained. Join together in following my example, brothers and sisters, and just as you have us as a model, keep your eyes on those who live as we do.  For, as I have often told you before and now tell you again even with tears, many live as enemies of the cross of Christ. Their destiny is destruction, their god is their stomach, and their glory is in their shame. Their mind is set on earthly things. But our citizenship is in heaven. And we eagerly await a Savior from there, the Lord Jesus Christ, who, by the power that enables him to bring everything under his control, will transform our lowly bodies so that they will be like his glorious body.

Titles For Latest LCCC Bulletin analysis & editorials from miscellaneous sources published on February 01/18
Israeli Education Minister Bennett: Israel Should Target Iran, Not Just Its Terror Proxies/Jerusalem Post/January 31/18
US Defends Role Of Lebanon Army As Israel Threatens To Attack It/Jerusalem Post/January 31/18
Lieberman on Possible War in Lebanon: If Israelis Are Forced Into Bomb Shelters, All of Beirut Will Be Too/Yaniv Kubovich/Haaretz/January 31/2018
High profile Russian delegation in Israel shortly after Putin-Netanyahu Moscow talks/DEBKAfile/January 30/18
Lebanese authorities less tolerant of media criticism/RSF_en/January 31/18
HRW/Lebanon: Pattern of Prosecutions for Free Speech/Repeal Laws Criminalizing Peaceful Speech; Drop Charges/Human Rights Watch/ January 31/18/
Welcome to America, Terrorists! Right This Way for Student Visas/Majid Rafizadeh/Gatestone Institute/January 31/18
Europe: Making Totalitarianism Great Again/Judith Bergman/Gatestone Institute/January 31/18
The Khomeini regime and the Supreme Guide’s cane/Mashari Althaydi/Al Arabiya/January 31/18
The bitter taste of Mosul/Christine Jamet/Al Arabiya/January 31/18
In the wake of Trump’s Mideast policy, neutrality doesn’t help/Walid Jawad/Al Arabiya/January 31/18
Full Text: Trump’s State of the Union address/Fox News January 31/18


Titles For Latest LCCC Lebanese Related News published on February 01/18
Israeli Education Minister Bennett: Israel Should Target Iran, Not Just Its Terror Proxies
US Defends Role Of Lebanon Army As Israel Threatens To Attack It
PSP supports Berri, takes jab at Aoun and Bassil
Berri says won't hinder Cabinet, but it face obstacles
Old enmity tips Lebanon into new crisis
Lieberman on Possible War in Lebanon: If Israelis Are Forced Into Bomb Shelters, All of Beirut Will Be Too
High profile Russian delegation in Israel shortly after Putin-Netanyahu Moscow talks
Lebanese authorities less tolerant of media criticism
HRW/Lebanon: Pattern of Prosecutions for Free Speech/Repeal Laws Criminalizing Peaceful Speech; Drop Charges
Aoun Warns against Street Protests, Vows to Work for 'National Unity'
Hamadeh, Khreis join symbolic sit in outside Education Ministry in solidarity with Berri
Aoun, Berri, Hariri Warn over Israeli Threats
Hizbullah Vows to Confront 'Any Attack' on Lebanon's 'Oil and Gas Rights'
Hundreds Take Part in Pro-Berri Rally outside Education Ministry
Lebanese Ministers React to Lieberman's Remarks on Gas Block
Israeli Defense Minister: Lebanon Will Pay for Iranian Meddling
Ain el-Tineh Visitors: Berri Man of Valour to Apologize for Harm Caused by Protesters
Report: Cabinet Meeting Delayed 'Until Bassil Makes Apology' over Berri Remarks
German President Concludes Visit to Lebanon
Hariri Meets Turkish Counterpart in Ankara


Titles For
Latest LCCC Bulletin For Miscellaneous Reports And News published on February 01/18
US puts Hamas chief Haniya on terror blacklist
Arab quartet blasts ‘misleading’ UN report on boycott of Qatar
Bahrain condemns two in terror cell to death
Egyptian court sentences 16 over Church raid
Macron warns Turkey against ‘invasion’ of Syria
Russia says hundreds killed in Turkish operation in Syria’s Afrin
Yemeni army declares north and east of Taiz ‘military zones’
‘Drunken, unruly passenger’ flying from Dubai-Manila barred from Philippines
President of the Zionist Organization visits Qatar, meets Tamim
Bahrain Condemns 2 Shiites in 'Terror Cell' to Death
Trump Says Stands with Iranians' 'Courageous Struggle'
Putin, Erdogan 'Satisfied' with Sochi Syria Congress, Kremlin Says
Rouhani Warns Iran Must Heed Lessons of 1979 Revolution
South Yemen Separatists Pin Down Govt in De Facto Capital
Egypt's Sisi Inaugurates Zohr Gas Field
40,000 Displaced Yemenis Stranded without Aid in Aden
 
Latest Lebanese Related News published on February 01/18
Israeli Education Minister Bennett: Israel Should Target Iran, Not Just Its Terror Proxies/وزير اسرائيلي يطالب بضرب إيران وليس فقط اذرعتها الإرهابية
Jerusalem Post/January 31/18
http://eliasbejjaninews.com/archives/62217
Israel must immediately change its strategy and hold Iran responsible for attacks from Hezbollah and Syria, security cabinet minister Naftali Bennett (Bayit Yehudi) said Wednesday at the Institute for National Security Studies conference in Tel Aviv. Bennett said that for 30 years, Israel has made the mistake of targeting what he called "mosquitoes" and not "the swamp" and what he called "tentacles" and not "the octopus.""Our message to Iran: the era of your immunity while you send others and use your national resources to hurt Israel is over," Bennett said. "A rocket from Lebanon will be treated like an Iranian rocket. We will not waste our resources and energy fighting in Lebanese towns while you recline your chair and watch. We will also not sit idly and watch the accumulation of accurate missiles in Lebanon. Between 2006 and 2012, Hezbollah made a massive leap in the quantities of its rockets, and now has over 130,000. We will not allow it to make a qualitative leap. This strategy means Iran, the Quds Force and the host countries will pay a price."Bennett said he was not necessarily referring to armed conflict with Iran and its Quds Force but a "war via diplomacy, intelligence, preemptive efforts, technological means, economic sanctions, and – if needed – other means." He also called for different strategies with Lebanon and Iranian militias in Syria, He said that unlike in the past, Hezbollah attacking Israel from Lebanon must be seen as a declaration of war by Lebanon against Israel and that "Assad will bear responsibility for actions taking place in and from his territory." Bennett said Israel must make use of regional opportunities created over the past few years. He said the US and pragmatic Arab countries understand that the center of world terror is Iran, and based on this, Israel can create a regional coalition, if Israel makes drastic changes regarding its policy, the building and training of its armed forces, and regional alliances
"I believe adopting the Octopus Doctrine, the core of which is acting against the Quds Forces and Iran, while weakening Iran's hold on Lebanon, Syria and Gaza, has the highest chances of preventing war, or shortening it if it breaks out," Bennett said. Earlier, Public Security Minister Gilad Erdan (Likud), who is also in the security cabinet, said now was the time to persuade the US and other countries to recognize that Israel will permanently control the Golan Heights."In the Trump era, Israel needs to speak and do not what is politically correct, but what is correct," Erdan said

US Defends Role Of Lebanon Army As Israel Threatens To Attack It
Jerusalem Post/January 31/18
أميركا تدافع عن الجيش اللبناني في خضم تهديدات إسرائيلية باستهدافه
http://eliasbejjaninews.com/archives/62217
TEL AVIV - The United States pledged continued support for Lebanon's military on Wednesday, calling it a potential counterweight to Iranian-backed Hezbollah, even as Israel said the two forces were indistinguishable and fair game in any future war.
Such a public difference of opinion between two close allies was remarkable enough, but especially so as it was sounded by senior officials at the same event - an Israeli security conference.
The Lebanese Armed Forces took no part in the 2006 war between Hezbollah and Israel, which killed around 1,200 people in Lebanon and 158 Israelis. It has received more than $1.5 billion in US military assistance since then and, in the last seven years, training and support from US special forces too.
With Hezbollah having helped sway the Syrian civil war in President Bashar Assad's favor, Israel and the United States both worry that the Iranian-backed militia could now broaden its clout in its Lebanese heartland. They disagree on whether the Lebanese army would help or hinder Hezbollah's expansion.
"We will sustain our efforts to support legitimate state security institutions in Lebanon, such as the Lebanese Armed Forces, which is the only legitimate force in Lebanon," David Satterfield, acting assistant US secretary of state, told the conference organized by Tel Aviv University's INSS think-tank.
Satterfield, a former US ambassador to Lebanon, added that the Lebanese army "could well serve as a counter-weight to Hezbollah's desire to expand its own influence there, as well as Iran's reach in Lebanon."
But speaking three hours later on the same stage, Israeli Defense Minister Avigdor Liberman reiterated his view that the Lebanese army was subordinate to the better-equipped Hezbollah.
"As far as I'm concerned, all of Lebanon - the Lebanese army, Lebanon and the Lebanese army - are no different from Hezbollah," said Liberman, a far-rightist in Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's conservative coalition government.
"They are part of Hezbollah and they will all pay the full price" for any large-scale attack on Israel, Lieberman added.
The INSS conference coincided with heightened concern in Israel about what it describes as Iranian efforts to fit precision-guidance systems onto Hezbollah's longer-range missiles - improvements that could potentially allow the fighters to knock out key Israeli infrastructure.
Israel's public response has been to lobby Russia - which has some sway over Iran and Hezbollah because of their alliance in Syria. Israel has also issued explicit warnings that it would devastate Lebanon should Hezbollah launch another war. There was no immediate response from Hezbollah or the Lebanese military to Liberman's comments. Neither Hezbollah nor Iran has responded to the Israeli allegations about missile conversions.
The Lebanese military has previously said it operates independently from Hezbollah, most recently during an operation against Islamic State at the Lebanese-Syrian border last year, during which the army said there was absolutely no coordination with Hezbollah fighters who attacked IS from the Syrian side.
Lieberman made similar remarks about the Lebanese military in October, marking a hard tack from more measured Israeli estimates that the Lebanese army maintained autonomy even if some of its troops cooperated with Hezbollah.

 
PSP supports Berri, takes jab at Aoun and Bassil
Berri says won't hinder Cabinet, but it face obstacles
The Daily Star/January 31, 2018
BEIRUT: Speaker Nabih Berri Wednesday played down reports that his ministers would withdraw from the government, but said Cabinet could still face obstacles due to the current political crisis. Speaking to MPs during a weekly gathering at his Ain al-Tineh residence, Berri was quoted by local media outlets as saying: “There is no fear over the government and it will continue [working]; however, it could face obstacles as a result of the tense political climate.” Agriculture Minister Ghazi Zeaiter told reporters that Berri and his party want the country to remain stable, “Christians and Muslims together.”Referring to the reactions and street protests held by Berri's supporters across the country since Foreign Minister Gebran Bassil called the speaker a "thug" in a leaked video, Zeaiter said no one could control the response. "These are the Lebanese people. However, for what was said by a minister inside the government, I think these reactions were a little light, to be honest.”A number of MPs echoed Zeaiter, saying that neither Berri nor the Amal Movement called on supporters to take to the streets. MP Qassem Hashem said the solution to this crisis is through an apology from Bassil. Meanwhile, a minister from MP Walid Jumblatt’s Progressive Socialist Party made an unexpected appearance at the weekly bloc meeting, appearing to take a swipe at President Michel Aoun over his dispute with Berri. Education Minister Marwan Hamadeh attended the meeting traditionally held for the parliamentary bloc members close to Berri. “We announce the unity of our [parliamentary] bloc with Berri and everyone should remember that we are in a democratic republic,” Hamadeh told reporters as he entered Berri’s residence. “We are in a parliamentary regime, not a presidential regime,” Hamadeh said, in an apparent jab at Aoun. “Whoever goes outside of the constitution will be held responsible." Defending Berri, Hamadeh said that the speaker doesn’t want to increase tensions but that there are stances being taken “that we are beginning to complain about, such as disrespecting the constitution and Taif Accord.”
Jumblatt originally tried to calm an escalating dispute between Aoun and Berri, but his proposal was reportedly shot down. Since then, Jumblatt and his party have been vocal in their support for Berri.

Old enmity tips Lebanon into new crisis
Gulf News/January 30/2018
Berri supporters burn tyres over ‘thug’ remark; Berri, Aoun parties trade accusations over gunfire
BEIRUT: An old enmity between the Lebanese president and the speaker of parliament is fuelling a political row that threatens to paralyse government and inflame sectarian tension before elections in May. The dispute between President Michel Aoun, a Christian, and the Shiite speaker, Nabih Berri, reflects personal hostility dating to the 1975-90 civil war. It also touches on the balance of power between their sects in a system that shares government participation among religious groups. The tension reached boiling point on Monday as footage of Aoun’s son-in-law, Foreign Minister Gebran Bassil, calling Berri “a thug” circulated on social media. Berri’s camp reacted with fury, saying Bassil had crossed “red lines”. Supporters of Berri from the Amal movement he has led for decades protested by setting tyres ablaze in Beirut.
Gunfire was heard as Berri supporters gathered near offices of Aoun’s Free Patriotic Movement (FPM) in a Christian area east of Beirut. Soldiers were deployed to contain tensions, security sources said. The sides traded accusations over the incident. Prime Minister Saad Al Hariri urged calm.
The crisis has spiralled since December, when Aoun signed a decree promoting dozens of army officers without the signature of Shiite Finance Minister Ali Hassan Khalil, a member of Amal and one of his closest aides. Berri has accused Aoun of exceeding his powers at the expense of other sects.
The row has shattered the rare moment of national unity that saved Lebanon from strife during the crisis over Hariri’s resignation in November. The tensions have also shaken Aoun’s ties with Iran-backed Hezbollah, whose links to Berri and Amal run much deeper than its political alliance with the FPM, which was founded by Aoun and is now led by Bassil.
Bassil expressed regret for his remarks in an interview with the pro-Hezbollah Al Akhbar newspaper, but that did little to resolve the dispute. Berri and Aoun, both in their 80s, were civil war enemies. The conflict ended in 1990 when the Syrian army forced Aoun, then head of one of two rival governments, from the presidential palace and into exile. Berri emerged from the war as one of the most powerful figures in Lebanon. Aoun only returned to Lebanon in 2005 when the era of Syrian military presence was ended with the assassination of Rafik Hariri, which triggered pressure on Damascus to withdraw troops from Lebanon. Helped by his alliance with Hezbollah, Aoun finally realised his long-held ambition of becoming president in 2016 in a deal that made Hariri prime minister. Berri and Amal MPs were among the few not to support Aoun’s candidacy.
But Aoun and Berri cooperated to help resolve the crisis caused by Hariri’s unexpected resignation in November. And Hariri, Lebanon’s top Sunni, said he was now working on an initiative to end the Aoun-Berri standoff. “The country is not in need of escalation or crisis,” he said.
Hezbollah rejected what it described as an insult to Berri.
“This language takes the country towards dangers it could do without,” Hezbollah said in a statement.
The FPM accused Amal members of attacking the FPM office east of Beirut, saying they had thrown rocks, burnt tyres and opened fire, forcing guards “to defend themselves”. Amal denied this.
Hariri hopes to secure international support for Lebanon’s security forces at a Rome conference in February, and billions of dollars of investment in its struggling economy at a Paris conference in late March or early April.
But the Aoun-Berri standoff could rumble on until the parliamentary elections, Lebanon’s first since 2009, analysts say.

 
Lieberman on Possible War in Lebanon: If Israelis Are Forced Into Bomb Shelters, All of Beirut Will Be Too
ليبرمان يهدد بضرب بيروت في حال تعرضت بلاده للتهديد الفعلي

Yaniv Kubovich/Haaretz/January 31/2018
http://eliasbejjaninews.com/archives/62209
Israeli defense minister says escalated tensions along the northern border could lead to a conflict, in which Israel would consider deploying boots on the ground
Defense Minister Avigdor Lieberman on Wednesday commented on the possibility of conflict with Lebanon breaking out, saying that Israeli soldiers may have to operate deep in Lebanese territory and maneuver on the ground on the battlefield if war breaks out.
Lieberman's comments are the latest in a series of warnings from senior Israeli officials warning about Hezbollah's attempts to arm itself with precision missiles produced in Lebanon.
“Maneuvering is not a goal in itself. The goal is to end the war,” Lieberman said at a conference of the Institute for National Security Studies at Tel Aviv University.
“No one is looking for adventures, but if we have no choice the goal is to end [the fighting] as quickly and as unequivocally as possible,” he added. “Regrettably, what we have in all the conflicts in the Middle East is that without soldiers on the ground it does not come to an end.”
“Such operations demand great effort and unfortunately casualties too. All options are open and I and not enslaved to any viewpoint,” he added. “We must prepare for maneuvering on the ground too, even if we do not use it.”
“We will do so with full strength. We must not take one step forward and one step backward. We will move forward as fast as possible,” said Lieberman.
“We will not see pictures like those from the Second Lebanon War in which the residents of Beirut were at the beach and in Tel Aviv [they were] in bomb shelters. If in Israel they sit in shelters, then in the next fighting all of Beirut will be in shelters.”
Speaking with reporters after his meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said that Iran's precision missile factories in Lebanon were already "in progress" and that he had stressed to his Russian counterpart that it is a threat Israel was not willing to accept.
According to Netanyahu, the Russians "fully understand our position and the seriousness with which we view such threats." He added that Israel's ties with the Kremlin are important for security coordination between the countries: "The Russian army is on our border and we have managed to preserve our interests and freedom to act [by] coordinating expectations."
“The Hezbollah terror organization is violating the UN Security Council resolutions, maintaining a military presence in the region, possessing weapons systems and increasing its military capabilities,” Gabi Eisenkot said Tuesday.
Israeli defense officials believe that Iran has resumed building a precision weapons factory in Lebanon, IDF spokesman Ronen Manelis wrote in an article published Sunday.
The manufacture of the missiles in Lebanon gives the IDF a problem that differs from its concerns about Syria. According to reports in the foreign media, the IDF has been striving in Syria in recent years to prevent smuggling, the stockpiling of warehouses and the manufacture of weapons earmarked for Hezbollah.
Israeli military and political leaders have thus sent messages, whether in articles by top IDF officers or in comments by leading ministers including Defense Minister Avigdor Lieberman and Education Minister Naftali Bennett, the head of the right-wing Habayit Hayehudi party.
For the IDF, an attack on the plants are a last resort, and preference will be given to clandestine activities, the exposure of the sites and a diplomatic effort to stop production at the plants. The IDF believes that an attack on the plants could worsen the situation to the point of a high-intensity conflict, as happened in the 2006 Second Lebanon War.
Sources in the IDF said this week that any operations in the area could lead to a war, as happened with the abduction of soldiers Eldad Regev and Ehud Goldwasser in 2006, an event that led to the Second Lebanon War. A similar event was the abduction of three yeshiva students in the West Bank in 2014, which sparked Israel’s Operation Protective Edge in Gaza.
In addition to missile production, the IDF is concerned about Hezbollah’s actions along the border. There are an estimated 240 villages in southern Lebanon that Hezbollah has turned into combat areas in the event of a war.
 
High profile Russian delegation in Israel shortly after Putin-Netanyahu Moscow talks
DEBKAfile/January 30/18
زيارة روسية عاجلة الى إسرائيل.. واتفاق على إخراج "حزب الله" من سوريا

(ديبكا فايلز - لبنان 24)

http://eliasbejjaninews.com/archives/62215
Russia’s National Security Adviser Nikolai Patrushev and deputy foreign, justice and public security ministers arrived in Jerusalem Tuesday, Jan. 30, along with senior military and intelligence generals. They came less than 24 hours after Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu sat down in the Kremlin with President Vladimir Putin. The Russian visitors are the guests of Israel’s National Security Council chief Meir Ben Shabat. They are to hold talks with their Israeli counterparts on questions relating to Iranian’s military presence in Syria and Lebanon and the amendments Israel seeks for the 2015 nuclear accord with Iran, of which Russia along with the US and four other world powers were signatories.
No announcement was made on the duration of the high-ranking Russian visit.
DEBKAfile’s diplomatic sources note that it is unprecedented for a delegation of such eminence to get organized for a foreign mission in so short a space of time. Putin must have expedited it for three reasons:
He told Netanyahu that the Iranian and Syrian issues could not be settled in a single conversation and called for a thorough appraisal. To this end, he was sending a high-profile delegation to Israel for a thorough threshing-out of all their aspects.
Putin saw his chance to create daylight between Israel and Washington’s current posture in Syria which is confrontational.
Participants in the Jan 29-30 Sochi conference on Syria, which failed, were to be shown that Moscow has multiple options to pursue in Syria.
DEBKAfile reported earlier in this space:
The Trump administration’s abrupt flight from its understandings with Moscow on Syria left Netanyahu with a blank agenda for his Moscow talks with Putin on Monday, Jan 29.
This about-face will be examined, with new revelations, in the coming issue of DEBKA Weekly out on Friday, Feb. 2
DEBKAfile reports exclusively that Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu had been well primed for his meeting in Moscow with Russian President Vladimir Putin. He had come away from last week’s Davos Economic Forum and his talks with President Donald Trump and European leaders with a strong impression of amity between Trump and Putin, endorsed by key European leaders, on two critical issues: that Syria’s political transition from war to peace would lead to Bashar Assad’s ouster along with the eviction of all foreign armies, including those of Iran and Hizballah. This was the essence of the “non-paper’ drawn up by Secretary of State Rex Tillerson in conjunction with Russia’s plans for Syria. Moscow planned to put this formula before the Sochi Syrian peace conference on Monday, Jan. 29.
But between the end of the Davos forum on Friday, Jan. 26 and Sunday night, Jan. 28, this deal was blown sky high in Washington, just hours before Netanyahu set out for Moscow. His agenda was to have centered on obtaining a Russian guarantee that the new military and political understanding with the Americans left Israel’s military with freedom of action in the skies of Syria and Lebanon among other topics. But in the light of the turnabout in Washington, he had to rethink his agenda. So, shortly before his plane took off from Tel Aviv, Netanyahu performed a second last-minute switch of accompanying advisers, replacing Military Intelligence chief Maj. Gen. Hertzi Halevi with an officer of lower rank.
The issue of a permanent Iranian military presence in Syria is always on every Israeli agenda. But Netanyahu had already repeatedly made Israel’s position known on this to Putin. He already knew that Israel was determined not let Lebanon be used as an Iranian missile base, and this matter was not in any case at the forefront of Russian strategists’ concerns.
DEBKA Weekly 787, out on Feb. 2, brings you exclusive rundowns on the dynamics behind the Trump administration’s sudden decision to ditch its understandings with the Russians on Syria and Iran, on Moscow’s role, on the Saudi crown prince’s stance, and how these elements came together to scuttle the Sochi peace conference, which Putin called as part of his campaign for reelection in March.


Lebanese authorities less tolerant of media criticism
RSF_en/January 31, 2018
/Reporters Without Borders (RSF) is concerned about an increase in judicial proceedings in Lebanon against media outlets critical of the authorities or their allies, including two recent or ongoing cases of journalists being prosecuted just for doing their job. One concerns Marcel Ghanem, the host of a talk-show on Lebanon’s LBCI TV channel. Ghanem is more used to putting questions to his guests but on 2 February he will have to challenge the validity of the defamation proceedings against him, which could lead to a one-year jail sentence. Ghanem is being prosecuted for allowing two Saudi journalists to express strong criticism of the Lebanese authorities during a broadcast of Kalam el Nas (“What they say”) last November and for then refusing respond to an initial summons for questioning. “This clearly involves political pressure on the judicial system and attacks on freedom of expression before the coming elections,” he told RSF. The other concerns Hanin Ghaddar, the former editor of the Lebanese English-language newspaper NOW, who was sentenced in absentia by a military court on 12 January to six months in prison for allegedly “defaming the Lebanese army” at a conference in Washington in 2014, when she said the army gave preferential treatment to the Shiite militant group Hezbollah. “I am not the only journalist to shed light on Hezbollah’s activities in my articles but, as I am from a Shiite family, their resentment towards me is greater,” said Ghaddar, who plans to turn to international bodies to contest her conviction. Ghaddar and NOW were previously prosecuted before a military court for publishing an interview with a political activist who said she had been raped and beaten in prison. The case was finally dropped.
“We condemn these disproportionate prosecutions,” RSF said. “Journalists should not be tried before military courts and should not be charged with defamation for comments made or obtained in the course of their journalistic activities, regardless of the political context. We stress the importance of pluralism for the proper functioning of a democratic society.”According to Lebanese press freedom groups such as SKeyes, judicial proceedings against the media have increased since Michel Aoun’s election as president in late 2016, and have increased still more following Prime Minister Saad Hariri’s resignation (announced during a visit to Saudi Arabia and then withdrawn) and now in the run-up to parliamentary elections. In the past year or so, Lebanon has seen a spate of insult or defamation proceedings against editorial writers, Twitter and Facebook users and even a humourist. In the latest case, the Lebanese daily Ad-Diyar was accused last weekend of insulting Saudi Arabia’s king. Its editor, Charles Ayoub, is facing a possible one-year jail sentence.
Lebanon is ranked 99th out of 180 countries in RSF's 2017 World Press Freedom Index.
 
HRW/Lebanon: Pattern of Prosecutions for Free Speech/Repeal Laws Criminalizing Peaceful Speech; Drop Charges
http://eliasbejjaninews.com/archives/62223
Human Rights Watch/ January 31/18/
(Beirut) – A pattern of prosecutions for criticizing officials is threatening freedom of speech and opinion in Lebanon, Human Rights Watch said today. Last week, On January 24, 2018, in the latest such case, the public prosecutor brought defamation charges against a comedy show host, Hisham Haddad, after an episode in which he made jokes relating to Prime Minister Saad Hariri and Saudi Crown Prince Mohammad Bin Salman.
Authorities should drop criminal charges for peaceful speech and parliament should urgently repeal laws that criminalize mere criticism of authorities or national symbols. In no case should authorities detain people for peaceful criticism.
“The space for free expression in Lebanon is rapidly shrinking, as authorities continue to bring criminal charges in response to criticism of public officials,” said Lama Fakih, deputy Middle East director at Human Rights Watch. “This type of heavy-handed response does nothing but restrict free expression and opinion, and tarnish Lebanon’s image.”
The pattern of such cases has intensified in recent months. On January 10, Lebanon’s military court sentenced a Lebanese journalist and researcher, Hanin Ghaddar, in absentia to six months in prison for defaming the Lebanese army during a 2014 conference in the United States, Ghaddar told Human Rights Watch. On January 20, Lebanon’s military intelligence summoned an activist, Obada Yousef, for questioning over Facebook posts concerning leading Lebanese politicians. He was detained by the military and police for four days, he told Human Rights Watch.
In November 2017, local media reported that a prominent television host, Marcel Ghanem, was charged with obstruction of justice after he protested charges brought against two of his guests for criticizing the president. Also in November, a Lebanese poet, Mustafa Sbeity, was arrested for “insulting” the Virgin Mary in a Facebook post and detained for 16 days. His lawyer told Human Rights Watch that he was charged under articles 474 and 317 of Lebanon’s criminal code, pertaining to insulting a religion and inciting sectarianism. That same month, the journalist and secretary general of the Civil Islamic Coalition, Ahmad Ayoubi, was arrested for defaming the president, and detained for 13 days, his lawyer told Human Rights Watch.
In addition to prosecutions for speech that should not be criminalized, security services including Lebanon’s Internal Security Forces and army have used force in response to recent protests, further eroding the space for freedom of expression. The apparent lack of accountability for these abuses has only compounded the situation.
Although Lebanon’s courts do not frequently issue lengthy prison sentences for peaceful speech, the prosecutions, use of pretrial detention, and lengthy trials further stifle free expression and opinion.
Lebanon’s constitution guarantees freedom of expression “within the limits established by law.” But the Lebanese penal code criminalizes libel and defamation against public officials and authorizes imprisonment of up to one year in such cases. Article 384 of the penal code authorizes imprisonment of six months to two years for insulting the president, the flag, or the national emblem. Article 157 of the military code of justice criminalizes insulting the flag or army, punishable by three months to three years in prison.
Laws that allow imprisonment in response to criticism of individuals or government officials are incompatible with Lebanon's international obligations to protect freedom of expression. Such laws are a disproportionate and unnecessary response to the need to protect reputations, and they chill freedom of expression. In addition, “libel,” “defamation,” and “insult” are not well-defined in Lebanese law, and such vague and broadly worded provisions can be used to quell criticism of the actions or policies of government officials.
The United Nations Human Rights Committee, which interprets the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, has held that “harassment, intimidation or stigmatization of a person, including arrest, detention, trial or imprisonment for reasons of the opinions they may hold, constitutes a violation” of the covenant, which Lebanon ratified in 1972. The committee has stated its disapproval of laws that criminalize insulting the head of state or national symbols. It has made clear that “in circumstances of public debate concerning public figures in the political domain and public institutions, the value placed by the covenant upon uninhibited expression is particularly high.”
Local and international human rights organizations have long documented Lebanon’s use of defamation laws to penalize lawyers, journalists, and activists for opinions and statements that are protected under international human rights law. The Skeyes Center for Media and Cultural Freedom found in a 2016 report that Lebanese defamation laws were being used for “targeting activists and dissidents and … intimidating online journalists, bloggers and Internet users from speaking about certain subjects, thus paving the way for self-censorship and the chilling of speech.”
In October 2015, MARCH, a Lebanese nongovernmental organization working on freedom of expression, created a hotline, promising legal support to anyone summoned by Lebanon’s cybercrimes bureau for online expression.
The proliferation of such prosecutions and the threat of arrest reflect an urgent need for Lebanon’s parliament to remove criminal sanctions for libel, defamation, and criticism of public officials and symbols, Human Rights Watch said.
“The sheer number of these arrests and prosecutions for speech that should never have been criminalized is alarming,” Fakih said. “Lebanon’s parliament should repeal laws criminalizing free speech and defamation and put an end to these prosecutions.”

Aoun Warns against Street Protests, Vows to Work for 'National Unity'
Naharnet/January 31/31/President Michel Aoun on Wednesday stressed that “streets have never been the right place to resolve political disputes,” referring to the protests and unrest of the past two days. “The natural place is state institutions, because resorting to street action harms the stability that Lebanon is enjoying despite being in an explosive region,” Aoun said, emphasizing that “what happened over the past two days should not be repeated.”“I will continue to work on bolstering national unity, no matter the obstacles that some parties may put in my way, because I know that this is the desire of the Lebanese people regardless of their political affiliations and choices,” the president added. Aoun, however, underlined that he is “determined to practice the powers that the constitution stipulates for the president.”And reiterating his commitment to the Taef Accord, which ended the civil war, the president called for implementing it “without selectivity.”“We cannot disregard the legal violations that are happening,” Aoun added, noting that “those who obstruct the course of reform do not want the welfare of Lebanon and the Lebanese or a state of law and institutions.”The unrest and protests of the past two days were sparked by the emergence of a leaked video showing Free Patriotic Movement chief Jebran Bassil – Aoun's son-in-law – calling Speaker Nabih Berri a "thug" during a closed meeting in Batroun. The video comes amid an escalating dispute between Berri and Aoun over a decree granting one-year's seniority to a number of army officers.The footage drew the ire of Berri's aides and political allies, who lashed out at Bassil, as supporters of the Speaker's AMAL Movement blocked roads across the country and encircled the FPM's headquarters in Sin el-Fil.

Hamadeh, Khreis join symbolic sit in outside Education Ministry in solidarity with Berri
Wed 31 Jan 2018 /NNA - National Education Minister, Marwan Hamadeh, and MP Ali Khreis, joined a while ago the symbolic sit-in outside the Education Ministry in Beirut’s UNESCO area, in solidarity with House Speaker Nabih Berri, NNA field reporter said on Wednesday.

Aoun, Berri, Hariri Warn over Israeli Threats
Naharnet/January 31/31/President Michel Aoun and Prime Minister Saad Hariri warned Wednesday over remarks by Israeli Defense Minister Avigdor Lieberman about an offshore gas site dubbed Block 9. “What Lieberman has said about Block 9 represents a direct threat to Lebanon and its right to extend national sovereignty over its territorial waters,” Aoun said. Berri for his part warned over Lieberman's statement and noted that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's visit to Russia is “more than dangerous.”“This requires all Lebanese to be vigilant and to cling to unity,” the Speaker added. Hariri meanwhile noted that “Israeli officials have been addressing threats to Lebanon for several days now, the last of which was Lieberman's claim that Block 9 belongs to Israel.”“This claim is wrong... and is part of Israel's expansionist and settler policies that are aimed at stealing the rights of others and jeopardizing regional security,” Hariri said. “The Lebanese government will follow up on the motives behind these remarks with the relevant international authorities, to affirm its legitimate right to act in its territorial waters and to reject any encroachment wherever it may come from,” the premier added.
“Lieberman's remarks are a blatant provocation that is rejected by Lebanon,” Hariri went on to say.
Lebanon in December approved a bid for offshore oil and gas exploration off its Mediterranean coast -- a vision for years hampered by political instability and domestic wrangling. That deal was awarded to the only bidder, an international consortium including France's Total and Russia's Novatek.
Lebanese officials say the country will start exploratory offshore drilling in 2019. A major finding in Lebanon's southernmost waters could raise the possibility of a dispute with Israel, which is developing a number of offshore gas deposits, with one large field, Tamar, already producing gas, and the larger Leviathan field set to go online next year. There are over 800 square kilometers of waters claimed by Lebanon and Israel, which are technically in a state of conflict. Israel and Hizbullah fought a fierce, monthlong war in 2006.

Hizbullah Vows to Confront 'Any Attack' on Lebanon's 'Oil and Gas Rights'
Naharnet/January 31/31/Hizbullah on Wednesday hit back at Israeli Defense Minister Avigdor Lieberman over remarks about offshore gas, pledging to “confront any attack” on Lebanon's “oil and gas rights.” “Lieberman's statements are a new reflection of the continuous Israeli ambitions regarding Lebanon's resources, land and waters, and are part of the hostile policy against Lebanon and its sovereignty and legitimate rights,” Hizbullah said in a communique. “As we express our support for the stances of the three presidents and the rest of Lebanese officials against this new aggression, we reiterate our firm and forthright stance on confronting any attack on our oil and gas rights, defending Lebanon's installations and protecting its resources,” the group added. It was referring to stances by Lebanon's president, parliament speaker and premier and the Lebanese ministers of foreign affairs, defense and energy.Earlier in the day, Lieberman described as "very provocative" Lebanon's tender on exploring gas in Block 9. This gas field "is by all accounts ours," the Israeli minister said. Lebanon in December approved a bid for offshore oil and gas exploration off its Mediterranean coast -- a vision for years hampered by political instability and domestic wrangling. That deal was awarded to the only bidder, an international consortium including France's Total and Russia's Novatek. Lebanese officials say the country will start exploratory offshore drilling in 2019. A major finding in Lebanon's southernmost waters could raise the possibility of a dispute with Israel, which is developing a number of offshore gas deposits, with one large field, Tamar, already producing gas, and the larger Leviathan field set to go online next year. There are over 800 square kilometers of waters claimed by Lebanon and Israel, which are technically in a state of conflict. Israel and Hizbullah fought a fierce, monthlong war in 2006.

Hundreds Take Part in Pro-Berri Rally outside Education Ministry
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/January 31/31/Hundreds of AMAL Movement supporters took part Wednesday evening in a rally outside the Education Ministry in Beirut's UNESCO Palace area. The rally organized by AMAL students, teachers and university professors was held in protest at Foreign Minister Jebran Bassil's leaked remarks against Parliament Speaker and AMAL leader Nabih Berri. Education Minister Marwan Hamadeh, MP Ali Khreis of Berri's Liberation and Development bloc, Berri's sister Hanadi Berri and the ministry's director general of vocational and technical education Salam Younis took part in the rally.Some protesters carried banners hailing Minister Hamadeh. “We came here to confirm in front of the Education Ministry that we are Lebanese students, academics and university professors who support Speaker Nabih Berri and who have keenness on civil peace,” a spokesman for the protesters, Ahmed Khiami, said. “Speaker Berri represents coexistence,” Khiami added. MP Khreis for his part described the sit-in as spontaneous. “Foreign Minister Jebran Bassil's sin will not go unnoticed. People here are expressing their opinion,” Khreis said. “We cannot accept insults against national leaders. Speaker Nabih Berri is a national leader who protected the resistance, took up arms against Israel and sought to consolidate national unity and coexistence,” Khreis added. Several protests some of which involved road-blocking and rioting were organized across Lebanon over the past three days after the emergence of a leaked video showing Bassil calling Berri a "thug" during a closed meeting in Batroun. The video comes amid an escalating dispute between Berri and President Michel Aoun over a decree granting one-year's seniority to a number of army officers.The footage drew the ire of Berri's aides and political allies, who lashed out at Bassil, with Finance Minister Ali Hassan Khalil calling the foreign minister “lowly” and a “political dwarf.”

Lebanese Ministers React to Lieberman's Remarks on Gas Block
Naharnet/January 31/31/Several Lebanese ministers swiftly reacted Wednesday to remarks by Israeli Defense Minister Avigdor Lieberman on an offshore gas block. Foreign Minister Jebran Bassil reminded of a January 18 letter to the U.N. in which he said that “the Lebanese republic asserts its right to use all means possible to defend itself and its legitimate and documented economic interests in the event of any attack.” Energy and Water Minister Cesar Abi Khalil also said that “Lebanon will utilize all means possible to fend off the Israeli attack declared today by Israeli Defense Minister Avigdor Lieberman about Block 9.”“Lieberman's remarks on Block 9 are a blatant attack on Lebanese rights and we will not allow anyone to impose any restrictions on us regarding the utilization of our oil resources,” Abi Khalil added, warning that “Lebanon will use all means possible to protect its petroleum activities.”
“Lebanon had informed the U.N. of the coordinates of its maritime borders, even before Israel's demarcation of its borders,” the minister went on to say, noting that “any objection against our maritime borders will remain on paper and no one will be able to implement it in reality.”
Defense Minister Yaacoub Sarraf meanwhile underlined that “the whole of Lebanon is clinging to its rights and it will defend its resources collectively.”“Lebanon does not bow to the approach of intimidation and threats, and we affirm its sovereignty over its land, waters and oil resources, including Block 9,” Sarraf added. Earlier in the day, Lieberman described as "very provocative" Lebanon's tender on exploring gas in Block 9. This gas field "is by all accounts ours," the Israeli minister said. Lebanon in December approved a bid for offshore oil and gas exploration off its Mediterranean coast -- a vision for years hampered by political instability and domestic wrangling.That deal was awarded to the only bidder, an international consortium including France's Total and Russia's Novatek. Lebanese officials say the country will start exploratory offshore drilling in 2019. A major finding in Lebanon's southernmost waters could raise the possibility of a dispute with Israel, which is developing a number of offshore gas deposits, with one large field, Tamar, already producing gas, and the larger Leviathan field set to go online next year. There are over 800 square kilometers of waters claimed by Lebanon and Israel, which are technically in a state of conflict. Israel and Hizbullah fought a fierce, monthlong war in 2006.

Israeli Defense Minister: Lebanon Will Pay for Iranian Meddling
Associated Press/Naharnet/January 31/31/Israel's defense minister warned Wednesday that should war erupt again with Hizbullah, Lebanon will "pay the full price" for Iran's entrenchment. Accusing Hizbullah of sacrificing Lebanon's national interests by "subjugating fully to Iran," Avidgor Lieberman warned that, as a result, all of Lebanon will be fair game in a future war. Speaking to the Institute for National Security Studies' annual conference, Lieberman said the Lebanese Army will be targeted and "if citizens of Tel Aviv are forced to sit in shelters, all of Beirut will too."Israel and Hizbullah fought a fierce, monthlong war in 2006. Israel has recently been warning of alleged efforts by Iran to turn Lebanon into "one giant missile site." Israel's chief military spokesman this week said it was "prepared for all the scenarios."

Ain el-Tineh Visitors: Berri Man of Valour to Apologize for Harm Caused by Protesters
Naharnet/January 31/31/Visitors to Speaker Nabih Berri reflected Wednesday the Speaker's “audacity” to apologize to Lebanese citizens over any harm caused by AMAL supporters during the latest street protests denouncing Bassil's remarks. “Berri has the audacity and responsibility to apologize to the Lebanese for any harm caused to any citizen,” said AMAL Movement MP Ali Bazzi after Berri's weekly meeting with lawmakers. Bazzi added that AMAL chief, Berri, “did not give instructions to AMAL supporters to take to the streets,” adding that it was an impulsive reaction following Foreign Minister Jebran Bassil's remarks about the Speaker. On reports about a possible resignation of AMAL ministers from the Cabinet in reaction, Bazzi said: “Berri sees no interest for anyone in the resignation of the government.” Footage of Minister Bassil, who is also head of the Free Patriotic Movement, was leaked on Sunday showing the minister calling parliament speaker a "thug" in a closed meeting. The video triggered protests Monday in some areas of Beirut. Some supporters of Berri set fire to tires and to pictures of President Michel Aoun and Bassil, shouting slogans against the foreign minister.
The leaked video comes amid an escalating dispute between Aoun and Berri over a decree that promoted a number of Lebanese army officers. Bassil, is Aoun's son-in-law. The footage drew the ire of Berri's political allies, who lashed out at Bassil. Finance Minister Ali Hassan Khalil described Bassil in a tweet as "lowly" and a "political dwarf."Hizbullah, an ally of Aoun but also traditionally an ally of Berri's Shiite AMAL movement, issued a statement categorically rejecting Bassil's statements. Such statements "do not build a state ... but create more crises and disunity," it said. Prime Minister Saad Hariri said "Lebanon does not need more escalation" and that he would exert all efforts to calm the political rhetoric in the country. Lebanese politics is still dominated by the same factions that fought one another in the 1975-1990 civil war.

Report: Cabinet Meeting Delayed 'Until Bassil Makes Apology' over Berri Remarks
Associated Press/Naharnet/January 31/31/In light of the latest political tension between Speaker Nabih Berri and Foreign Minister Jebran Bassil over the latter's comments about the Speaker, Prime Minister Saad Hariri has postponed this week's government meeting until the atmospheres “calm down” between the two, media reports said on Wednesday. Al-Joumhouria daily quoted well-informed sources who said the Cabinet will not convene this week “due to Hariri's visit to Turkey,” that he began on Tuesday. “But, the real reasons are the prime minister's reluctance to call the meeting, waiting to address the emerging crisis between AMAL Movement and the Free Patriotic Movement.”Meanwhile al-Akhbar daily quoted sources close to Berri who denounced Bassil's remarks describing them as an “insult”. “Berri is not only chief of AMAL party, he is also the parliament head and therefore insulting him means insulting the entire lawmakers. The least that can be done is an apology,” on Bassil's part, they said. “The Prime Minister gave an “anesthetic dose” by postponing the government session until he returns from Turkey. But certainly there will be no Cabinet meeting before an apology,” added the sources. A video emerged Sunday night showing the foreign minister calling parliament speaker a "thug" in a closed meeting. The leaked video comes amid an escalating dispute between President Michel Aoun and Berri over a decree that promoted a number of Lebanese army officers. Bassil, is Aoun's son-in-law and heads his Free Patriotic Movement party. The footage drew the ire of Berri's political allies, who lashed out at Bassil. Finance Minister Ali Hassan Khalil described Bassil in a tweet as "lowly" and a "political dwarf."The video triggered protests Monday in some areas of Beirut. Some supporters of Berri set fire to tires and to pictures of Aoun and Bassil, shouting slogans against the foreign minister. Hizbullah, an ally of Aoun but also traditionally an ally of Berri's Shiite AMAL movement, issued a statement categorically rejecting Bassil's statements. Such statements "do not build a state ... but create more crises and disunity," it said. Hariri said "Lebanon does not need more escalation" and that he would exert all efforts to calm the political rhetoric in the country. Lebanese politics is still dominated by the same factions that fought one another in the 1975-1990 civil war.

German President Concludes Visit to Lebanon

Associated Press/Naharnet/January 31/31/German President Frank-Walter Steinmeier concluded a three-day official visit to Lebanon on Wednesday at the invitation of President Michel Aoun, the National News Agency reported. Steinmeier had met Aoun, Speaker Nabih Berri, Prime Minister Saad Hariri and Muslim and Christian spiritual leaders during his visit. Meeting with Hariri on Tuesday, they discussed Berlin's participation in upcoming international conferences aimed at shoring up Lebanon's security forces and boosting its economy. Steinmeier had also met with Christian and Muslim spiritual leaders in Lebanon on the second day of his visit to the tiny Mediterranean country, which has been struggling with the fallout from the civil war in neighboring Syria. Lebanon, which hosts around a million Syrian refugees, is gearing up for three international conferences to be held in the coming months to bolster its economy and support its army and security forces. Steinmeier, who arrived in Lebanon Monday from neighboring Jordan, also met Tuesday with German troops who serve as part of a United Nations force. The meeting was held on board a German vessel at the port of Beirut, where he was met by the commander of the German troops in Lebanon. Germany has 126 soldiers contributing to the UNIFIL mission in Lebanon, including the Maritime Task Force, deployed since October 2006, which supports the Lebanese navy in securing the country's maritime borders.

Hariri Meets Turkish Counterpart in Ankara
Naharnet/January 31/31/Prime Minister Saad Hariri met with his Turkish counterpart Benali Yildirim in Turkey where talks focused on regional and bilateral issues and ways to activate economic and trade ties between the two countries, Hariri's media office said in a statement on Wednesday. The two men held a joint press conference afterward where Hariri said: “Lebanon wants a guaranteed safe return of Syrian refuges to their country.” The PM also extended gratitude to the Turkish state over the extradition of suspect involved in the January bombing in the city of Sidon. For his part, Yildirim said: “The implementation of Lebanon's neutral policy is very important,” pointing out that talks with Hariri touched on the “Turkish-Lebanese relations and issues of interest to both countries.” “Our goal is to develop Lebanon's infrastructure and contribute to the stability of the country,” he added. Hariri had arrived earlier at the headquarters of the Turkish government where he was received by Yildirim. The meeting was attended by Lebanese Ambassador to Turkey Ghassan al-Mouallem and the Turkish Ambassador to Lebanon Cagatay Erciyes, added the statement. Hariri traveled Tuesday evening to Ankara on an official visit during which he will also meet with Turkey's President Recep Tayyip Erdogan. Hariri is accompanied by Interior Minister Nouhad al-Mashnouq, his advisers Nader Hariri and Bassem al-Sabaa, and High Relief Commission chief Maj. Gen. Mohammed Kheir.


Latest LCCC Bulletin For Miscellaneous Reports And News published on February 01/18
US puts Hamas chief Haniya on terror blacklist
Staff writer, Al Arabiya English/Wednesday, 31 January 2018/The US Treasury Department put on Wednesday Hamas chief Ismail Haniya on the terror blacklist. The move is sure to raise tensions, after Washington recognized Jerusalem as Israel's capital. "Haniya has close links with Hamas' military wing and has been a proponent of armed struggle, including against civilians," the State Department said in a statement.
"He has reportedly been involved in terrorist attacks against Israeli citizens. Hamas has been responsible for an estimated 17 American lives killed in terrorist attacks." Haniya is now on the US Treasury sanctions blacklist, which freezes any US-based assets he may have and bans any US person or company from doing business with him. Hamas -- which has controlled the Gaza Strip for more than a decade -- had already been on the US terror blacklist since 1997.
The US government also slapped sanctions on Harakat al-Sabireen -- a small militant group that is close to Iran and operates in Gaza -- and two other groups active in Egypt: Liwa al-Thawra and HASM. “These designations target key terrorist groups and leaders -- including two sponsored and directed by Iran -- who are threatening the stability of the Middle East, undermining the peace process, and attacking our allies," Secretary of State Rex Tillerson said in a statement. “Today’s actions are an important step in denying them the resources they need to plan and carry out their terrorist activities.”Haniya replaced Khaled Meshaal, who now lives in Doha in exile. (With AFP)


Arab quartet blasts ‘misleading’ UN report on boycott of Qatar
Saudi Press Agency/Wednesday, 31 January 2018/
A joint statement was issued by Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain, Egypt accredited to the United Nations in Geneva in response to the content of the report of the technical mission of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights, which visited Doha in November 2017.
The statement reads as follows:
Following the report prepared by the Technical Mission of the High Commissioner for Human Rights on its visit to Qatar from 17 to 24 November 2017, the missions of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, the Kingdom of Bahrain and the Arab Republic of Egypt accredited in Geneva, express their denunciation of the report's methodological failure that included a misleading description of the political crisis, leading to the report's conclusions and observations based on a limited understanding of the general context of the political crisis and its historical background as the basis of this crisis goes back to the background of Qatar's support for individuals and entities internationally involved in financing terrorism and supporting its activities, and promoting their extremist ideology, which incites violence and promotes hate speech in the Arab region through Qatari media platforms or funded through Qatari figures.The four countries' boycott of Qatar is part of the exercise of their sovereign right to protect and defend their national security. It comes as a natural reaction that is not comparable in size and impact to the support by the Government of Qatar for terrorism in flagrant violation of the provisions of the Charter of the United Nations and International Law, and the resolutions by the Human rights Council and the General Assembly relevant to the impact of terrorism on the enjoyment of human rights.
On the other hand, we affirm that these measures are not aimed at the people of Qatar, with whom we have ties of brotherhood, closeness and conciliation, and even a tribal extension to some of our countries.
The missions of the four countries also express their lack of acceptance of the contents of the report and the results reached by it as it contained many of allegations and accusations that are unfounded. It also reflects a clear bias towards one of the parties of the political crisis as it adopted the same Qatari story based on false claims that the government of Qatar is seeking to promote regionally and globally.
The missions of the four countries register their reservation regarding the manner and timing of the leaking of the content of the report by the Qatari National Human Rights Committee during its press conference held in Doha, Qatar, on 8 January 2018. They note that the High Commission did not provide the missions of the four countries with the report until after it was published on Monday 8 January 2018.
They stress that the nature of the technical reports prepared by the High Commissioner for Human Rights at the request of member states aims to transfer experiences to develop the human rights system and address human rights violations in the state itself.
The four countries indicate that it has become clear to them that the main objective of the Qatari government to request a visit by the technical committee of the High Commission of Human Rights comes in the context of the media and political exploitation of the visit and the resulting report, not for its lofty objective of transferring the expertise of the commission to the Qatari side.
The four countries deplored the persistence of the Qatari policies based on lack of credibility and lack of goodwill in their use of the United Nations and its specialized international agencies and international reports.
Accordingly, the four States call upon the High Commission to address the methodological and procedural errors of the report which was not in conformity with international standards and the terms of reference of the High Commission for Human Rights, and which is incompatible with the nature of the work of the technical mission which was sent to Qatar in a manner that does not exceed the geographical boundaries of the state requesting technical support.
The four countries emphasize that the government of Qatar's disregard for any serious initiatives to resolve the political crisis and its continued attempts to mislead the international community on the main causes of the crisis through the accusations against the four countries at international organizations, despite the considerable and valued efforts of His Highness Sheikh Sabah Al-Ahmad Al-Jaber Al-Sabah, the Emir of Kuwait, confirms the lack of genuine and sincere intention in the foreseeable future in Qatar to return relations to their normal course with the countries of the boycott.

Bahrain condemns two in terror cell to death
AFP, Dubai/Wednesday, 31 January 2018/Bahrain’s criminal court on Wednesday sentenced two people to death and 19 others to life imprisonment in a ruling against a cell convicted of terror attacks. It also sentenced 17 members of the cell to 15 years in jail, nine others to 10 years, 11 to five years, and acquitted the last two defendants, Bahrain’s BNA news agency reported. Forming terror cell. The defendants were convicted of forming a terror cell that carried out a number of attacks, killing at least two policemen and wounding several others, and of smuggling weapons by boat. It also convicted them of attacking a prison and helping some prisoners to flee, of travelling to Iraq and Iran for military training and engaging in a gun battle with police. Large quantities of weapons including grenades and light machine-guns were seized from the group, according to the ruling. The court revoked the citizenship of 47 of the convicts.

Egyptian court sentences 16 over Church raid

Reuters, Cairo/Wednesday, 31 January 2018/An Egyptian court on Wednesday gave 15 people one-year suspended jail sentences over a December attack on an unlicensed Coptic Church in a village south of Cairo, judicial sources said.
The perpetrators were each fined 500 Egyptian pounds ($28) on charges of inciting sectarian strife, harming national unity and vandalizing private property. They can appeal.
Owner fined
The Giza misdemeanor court also fined the owner of the building, a Christian man, 360,000 Egyptian pounds ($20,500) for turning his residency into a church without a license. Dozens of Muslims from the village of Kafr al-Waslin attacked the church after Friday prayers on Dec. 22, smashing windows and breaking everything inside. The Archdiocese of Atfih had applied to legalize the church, which housed worshippers for 15 years after a church building law was passed in 2016. Christians in Egypt have long complained of discrimination in the majority-Muslim country and have increasingly come under attack in recent years.

Macron warns Turkey against ‘invasion’ of Syria
Moscow, AFP/Wednesday, 31 January 2018/French President Emmanuel Macron said in an interview Wednesday that he would have a “real problem” with Turkey’s intervention against a Kurdish militia in Syria if it turned into an outright “invasion”.“If the operation became more than fighting a potential terrorist threat on the Turkish border and turns out to be an invasion operation, we would have a real problem with that,” Macron told Le Figaro daily. The US and France have repeatedly expressed concern over Turkey’s 12-day cross-border offensive against the Kurdish People’s Protection Units (YPG), which Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan last week threatened to expand.
Terror organization
Ankara views the YPG as a terror organization allied to the outlawed Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) inside Turkey but the US has been backing it as an ally in the fight against ISIS. On Tuesday, Foreign Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian said that if the operation turned into an “occupation” of parts of Syria, it would be “totally reprehensible”. His remarks came after Erdogan threatened to push further east along the Syrian-Turkish border, until there was “no terrorist on our border leading to Iraq”. He also vow
ed to “clean up” the YPG-held city of Manbij east of Afrin, where the US has troops. Macron said Turkey’s operation required Europe and its allies to “have discussions and take decisions”, without specifying what they might be.

Russia says hundreds killed in Turkish operation in Syria’s Afrin

The Associated Press, Reuters/Wednesday, 31 January 2018/Several hundred people, including civilians, have been killed during Turkey’s military operation in Syria’s Afrin, Interfax news agency cited Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova as saying on Wednesday. Rockets fired from northern Syria into a Turkish border town killed a teenage girl and wounded another person on Wednesday, Turkey’s state-run news agency reported amid Ankara’s intensifying offensive on a Syrian Kurdish-controlled enclave. It was the latest in a string of rocket attacks on the border towns of Reyhanli and Kilis since Jan. 20, when Turkey’s military launched a cross-border operation to drive out the Syrian Kurdish militia from the northern enclave of Afrin. Ankara considers the Syrian Kurdish People’s Protection Units, or YPG, an extension of the outlawed Kurdish rebels fighting an insurgency inside Turkey.
Rockets fired in Afrin
Earlier today, Turkey’s Anadolu Agency said Syrian Kurdish fighters in Afrin fired two rockets Wednesday, hitting a house and a garden wall in Reyhanli.Two people were hospitalized after the attack and one, 17-year-old Fatma Avlar, died from her wounds, the agency said. The attacks inside Turkey have so far killed four people, including Avlar. Two of the victims were Syrian refugees.The Kurdish militia, meanwhile, accused Turkey of firing Katyusha rockets into Afrin, and reported that at least 12 people were wounded from the shelling that targeted the neighborhood of Ashrafieh. The wounded were brought to Afrin hospital.As Turkey’s military operation in Syria continues, officials in the US-led international coalition against ISIS have warned the offensive could destabilize recent gains against ISIS along the Iraq-Syria border in the Euphrates River valley. The top US general in Iraq said Tuesday, after a visit to a coalition outpost near the Iraq-Syrian border town of Qaim, that he is “very much concerned” the fight in Afrin could remove pressure on pockets of ISIS fighters in other parts of Syria.

Yemeni army declares north and east of Taiz ‘military zones’
Staff writer, Al Arabiya English/Wednesday, 31 January 2018/ The headquarters of the 22nd Brigade in the city of Taiz on Wednesday declared several areas of the north and east of the city as military zones warning citizens not to approach, as fighting continues on several fronts.This comes after the National Army announced a large-scale military operation to liberate the province of Taiz from the occupation of the Houthi militia. The leadership of "Brigade Mika 22" in Taiz called upon the fighters of the Houthi militia to surrender themselves as a last chance to prevent spilling of blood.
During the last few days many areas have been liberated including the Sarmin, Ab’ar, Adnah, Luzam, Laseb, al-Karifaat, and parts of the Taba al-Ja’isahaa, in addition to a number of sites in the northern front. This progress happened in coordination with the Arab coalition air strikes and logistical support, which have had a very significant impact on victories achieved in Taiz. Yemeni government spokesman Rajih Badee denied that the militia is trapping the President and members of the Yemeni government within the presidential compound in Aden, stressing that the palace and its surroundings are under the protection of Brigade one, the presidential security unit.

‘Drunken, unruly passenger’ flying from Dubai-Manila barred from Philippines
Staff writer, Al Arabiya English/Wednesday, 31 January 2018 /During a Manila-bound flight from Dubai on Saturday, an Indian passenger was detained and banned from entering the Philippines after he “manifested drunken behavior” on board the aircraft. According to a Khaleej Times article, the Cebu Pacific crew reported the passenger, Kalathiparamba Kunjipappu Sarinkumar, to the Philippine immigration bureau. He also disturbed other passengers on Flight 5J15 , they added. Upon being taken to the transfer desk at Ninoy Aquino International Airport, Sarinkumar reportedly displayed violent behavior. He also was said to have broken two glass panels in the immigration arrival area.

President of the Zionist Organization visits Qatar, meets Tamim
Staff writer, Al Arabiya English/Wednesday, 31 January 2018/ A top right-wing American Jewish leader, Morton Klein who is the president of the Zionist Organization visited Qatar and meet with its leader.
Klein speaking to the Israeli newspaper said that during his visit he met with many Qatari officials and also the Emir, Tamim bin Hamad Al Thani. He affirmed in remarks to the newspaper that the Qataris had invited him to visit over many months from September to December, before he confirmed his visit early this month. Morton said: “At first I refused because of their support for Hamas and the anti-Semitism being broadcast on Al Jazeera television.”But then he added he saw that “more and more Jewish leaders were going there, and I realized that at this point, they won’t be able to use me for propaganda because everyone is already going, but I might use the visit to push them on these issues.”Ever since the Arab states boycotted Qatar last summer over its support to radical groups and its interference in neighboring countries with the support of Iran, Doha has been trying to canvass international opinion through Westerners as well as Jewish figures. Many other American pro-Israel figures have also visited Qatar in recent months including Malcolm Hoenlein, the executive vice president of the Conference of Presidents of Major American Jewish organizations; Alan Dershowitz, the lawyer known for his TV appearances; and Orthodox Jewish leaders. Meanwhile, a spokesperson for the Israel embassy in the US, told Haaretz newspaper that it did not approve of the meetings by right-wing Jewish leaders with in recent months.

Bahrain Condemns 2 Shiites in 'Terror Cell' to Death
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/January 31/31/Bahrain's criminal court on Wednesday sentenced two Shiites to death and 19 others to life imprisonment in a ruling against a cell convicted of terror attacks. It also sentenced 17 members of the cell to 15 years in jail, nine others to 10 years, 11 to five years, and acquitted the last two defendants, Bahrain's BNA news agency reported. The defendants were convicted of forming a "terror" cell that carried out a number of attacks, killing at least two policemen and wounding several others, and of smuggling weapons by boat. It also convicted them of attacking a prison and helping some prisoners to flee, of travelling to Iraq and Iran for military training and engaging in a gunbattle with police. All the convicts are from the Shiite majority in the small Sunni-ruled Gulf kingdom. Large quantities of weapons including grenades and light machine-guns were seized from the group, according to the ruling. The court revoked the citizenship of 47 of the convicts. Thirty-six members, including the two condemned to death, are already in jail while the rest were sentenced in absentia, including 12 defendants living in Iran and Iraq and one in Germany, a judicial source told AFP. The London-based Bahrain Institute for Rights and Democracy (BIRD) immediately condemned the ruling. "Today’s ruling is the latest episode in Bahrain’s travesty of justice, and likely one of the most cruel," said the director of BIRD, Sayed Ahmed al-Wadaei. BIRD said two women were among those convicted while the fate of two other female defendants in the case was not immediately known. Twenty-one Bahrainis are now on death row in "political cases", 14 of them convicted in 2017, it said. Authorities have cracked down hard on dissent since mass street protests in 2011 that demanded an elected prime minister and constitutional monarchy in Bahrain.

Trump Says Stands with Iranians' 'Courageous Struggle'

Agence France Presse/Naharnet/January 31/31/US President Donald Trump threw Washington's weight behind Iranians protesting against their own government on Tuesday, as part of his high-profile State of the Union address. "When the people of Iran rose up against the crimes of their corrupt dictatorship, I did not stay silent," he declared, in implicit criticism of his predecessor's cautious response to a 2009 protest movement. "America stands with the people of Iran in their courageous struggle for freedom," he said, to applause from assembled lawmakers.

Putin, Erdogan 'Satisfied' with Sochi Syria Congress, Kremlin Says
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/January 31/31/President Vladimir Putin and his Turkish counterpart Recep Tayyip Erdogan on Wednesday expressed "satisfaction" with the results of a Syria peace congress, the Kremlin said. "The heads of state expressed satisfaction with the results of the Congress of Syrian National Dialogue held in Sochi on January 30," the Kremlin said in a statement. On Tuesday, Russia hosted a Syria peace congress in an effort to find a peace settlement after seven years of war but the conference closed without a significant breakthrough after a string of boycotts and last-minute cancellations. Nevertheless, UN Syria envoy Staffan de Mistura said delegates had agreed to the formation of a committee to discuss the war-torn country's post-war constitution. The Kremlin statement said Putin and Erdogan "emphasised the importance of the agreements" reached at Sochi, adding they were aimed at finding a solution based on a UN Security Council's resolution. The presidents also spoke of the "further coordination of Russia and Turkey's efforts to ensure the stable functioning of de-escalation zones" in Syria established by Turkey, Iran and Russia last year. Around 1,400 delegates attended the meeting, as part of a broader push by regime-backer Moscow to consolidate its influence in the Middle East.

Rouhani Warns Iran Must Heed Lessons of 1979 Revolution

Agence France Presse/Naharnet/January 31/31/President Hassan Rouhani said Wednesday that Iran must listen to protesters behind a recent wave of unrest, hinting that it risked another revolution if their demands are ignored. In a speech marking the 39th anniversary of the uprising, Rouhani also warned foreign powers that Iran's people would "forever safeguard the Islamic republic". "As long as people love the culture of Islam and love their Iran and safeguard their national unity, no superpower can change the path of this nation," he said, taking a jab at the United States.
But he said that popular support was at risk if his fellow elites did not listen to protests that have swept the country in recent weeks, and heed the lessons of the 1979 revolution that toppled shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi.
"All officials of the country should have a listening ear for people's demands and wishes," Rouhani said at the shrine of revolutionary leader Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini in southern Tehran. "The previous regime thought monarchical rule would last forever, but it lost everything for this very reason -- that it did not hear the criticism of the people," he added, flanked by Khomeini's grandson, Hassan Khomeini, a prominent reformist. Days of angry protests hit dozens of towns and cities over the new year, leaving at least 25 people dead and hundreds in detention. Recent days have also seen unprecedented protests by a handful of women, posing in public without their headscarves to show their rejection of mandatory Islamic clothing rules. Rouhani has allied himself with reformists and called for greater civil liberties, including the release of political prisoners, but has achieved little against an entrenched conservative elite that sees protests as subversive attacks orchestrated by foreign enemies. "No one can stop the great people of Iran from expressing their views, criticism and even protest," he said. The shah's regime "did not hear the voice of reformers, advisors, scholars, elites, and the educated," said Rouhani. "It only heard the voice of revolution... and by then, it was too late." His comments echoed the sharp criticism a day earlier from jailed reformist Mehdi Karroubi, who has been under house arrest for the past seven years for leading protests in 2009. Karroubi lashed out at supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei in an open letter, saying major reforms were needed "before it is too late".

South Yemen Separatists Pin Down Govt in De Facto Capital

Agence France Presse/Naharnet/January 31/31/Yemeni ministers were holed up in Aden's presidential palace on Wednesday after separatist forces seized effective control of the southern port city, dealing another blow to the country's embattled government. Pro-separatist forces backed by the UAE known as the "security belt" fanned out across the city -- the country's de facto capital -- after three days of fighting that left 38 people dead. The United Arab Emirates and Saudi Arabia have backed the beleaguered government of President Abedrabbo Mansour Hadi since intervening against Shiite Huthi rebels in Yemen's civil war in March 2015. But the Arab allies, whose military coalition was launched to roll back rebel gains and restore Yemen's "legitimate" government to power in Sanaa, have not intervened to prop up Hadi against his separatist rivals. The coalition has instead urged the separatists to exercise restraint and called on the government to weigh up the demands of its rivals. While Yemen's president resides in the Saudi capital, the infighting in the anti-Huthi camp has left Prime Minister Ahmed bin Dagher and a number of senior government figures holed up in the Aden presidential palace. A high-ranking military source said the separatists had also taken over the bin Dagher's office chief overnight. By Wednesday morning, the clashes appeared to subside.
A refuge 'shattered' -The United Nations raised alarm bells Wednesday over the impact of the violent standoff on more than 40,000 Yemenis recently displaced to Aden, and now cut off from aid. "UNHCR emergency aid distributions and humanitarian assessments planned this week for vulnerable, displaced Yemenis have now been postponed and UNHCR humanitarian cargo remains at Aden port unable to be released," the UN refugee agency (UNHCR) said via Twitter.
"We are also particularly concerned for those newly displaced in Aden who have fled other areas in Yemen. More than 40,000 people fled to Aden and nearby governorates since December and we anticipate more displacement as people continue to flee from hostilities in the west coast."At least 38 people have been killed and 222 wounded in Aden since Sunday, according to the International Committee of the Red Cross. The separatists, who for months have pushed for the reinstatement of South Yemen as an independent country, now control most of the city. Since 2015, Aden had served as a refuge for tens of thousands of Yemenis fleeing conflict in their hometowns across the country, as the Saudi-backed government battled Huthi rebels allied with Iran.
A coalition offensive along the Red Sea coast has sent new waves of displaced to the government's de facto capital in recent weeks. Save the Children on Tuesday said it was also suspending work in Aden out of fear for the safety of its staff in what the agency called the "shattered" former refuge.
Demand for self-rule -Separatists, mainly based in Aden, have gained traction since April in their push for self-rule, demanding the reinstatement of South Yemen under a self-proclaimed Southern Transitional Council. Before the fighting broke out, the STC had called on Hadi to make changes to his government, accusing it of corruption and mismanagement. The clashes have sparked fears of a repeat of South Yemen's 1986 civil war, a failed socialist coup which killed thousands in just six days and helped pave the way for the 1991 unification of South and North Yemen. The separatists, who enjoy popular support and are backed by some regular troops, have rapidly gained control over all but one district in Aden since Sunday. The Saudi-led coalition said it would take "all necessary steps to restore security" in Aden but has not intervened on the government's behalf. The UAE -- a pillar of the coalition -- has close ties to separatist leader Hani bin Breik while its "security belt" force backs the STC. A Yemeni government source said the coalition had, however, secured guarantees the separatists would not storm the presidential palace in Aden. More than 9,200 Yemenis have been killed since the coalition intervened in the war three years ago, triggering what the UN has called the world's largest humanitarian disaster. The coalition's original mission of rolling back Huthi gains has expanded to include fighting jihadist groups that have flourished during the war, and now keeping the peace between its allies on the ground.

Egypt's Sisi Inaugurates Zohr Gas Field
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/January 31/31/Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi on Wednesday inaugurated the offshore Zohr gas field, aimed at making the Arab world's most populous country self-sufficient in natural gas by the end of 2018. "We are now entering into the self-sufficiency stage... and, God willing, by the end of the year we will have reached self-sufficiency," Petroleum Minister Tarek al-Molla said at a ceremony in the northern city of Port Said, broadcast live on state television. In December, the oil ministry said it was starting production from the field discovered in 2015 by Italian energy giant Eni with an initial 350 million cubic feet (10 million cubic meters) a day. Molla, at the ceremony attended by Sisi, said Egypt expects it "will be able to stop importing liquefied natural gas... and therefore save what we import which is $230 million per month, or $2.8 billion annually." The Egyptian government is trying to roll back the impact of the 2011 uprising that toppled longtime ruler Hosni Mubarak and led to years of political, security and economic turmoil.

40,000 Displaced Yemenis Stranded without Aid in Aden
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/January 31/31/The U.N. expressed concern on Wednesday for more than 40,000 displaced Yemenis who had sought refuge in second city Aden, only to find themselves caught in deadly fighting between troops and separatist militia. The U.N. refugee agency (UNHCR) said it had been unable to distribute aid since the southern separatists overran most of the city at the weekend opening up a new front in Yemen's devastating three-year civil war. "UNHCR emergency aid distributions and humanitarian assessments planned this week for vulnerable, displaced Yemenis have now been postponed and UNHCR humanitarian cargo remains at Aden port unable to be released," the agency said on Twitter. "We are also particularly concerned for those newly displaced in Aden who have fled other areas in Yemen. More than 40,000 people fled to Aden and nearby governorates since December and we anticipate more displacement as people continue to flee from hostilities in the west coast." The separatists, who had been in an uneasy alliance with the beleaguered government of President Abedrabbo Mansour Hadi, launched their assault in Aden on Sunday and swiftly overran his troops, laying siege to the presidential palace. Aden has been the headquarters of Hadi's ministers since 2015, when Shiite rebels overran the capital Sanaa and much of the north. Hadi himself is based in exile in Saudi Arabia, which has led a military intervention in support of his forces since 2015. International charity Save the Children said on Tuesday that it too had been forced to suspend its work in Aden out of fear for the safety of its staff. Even before the latest fighting, Yemen already faced the world's most serious humanitarian crisis, with some 8.4 million of its 22.2 million population at risk of famine, according to the U.N.

Latest LCCC Bulletin analysis & editorials from miscellaneous sources published on February 01/18
Welcome to America, Terrorists! Right This Way for Student Visas!
Majid Rafizadeh/Gatestone Institute/January 31/18
https://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/11816/student-visas-terrorists
"Foreign students have one of the highest rates of overstaying visas of any category -- much higher even than tourist visas. It's one of the favorite visas for terrorists to try to obtain, because it offers a longer duration of stay." — Jessica M. Vaughan, the director of policy studies for the Center for Immigration Studies.
According to the Department of Homeland Security, there were approximately 739,000 immigrants who overstayed their visas last year alone. Roughly 80,000 of those were foreign students.
Worse, jihadists do not even need to obtain a university admission to set foot in the US. They can get a student visa by obtaining an admission from a school to learn English. Many of these Islamists can alter their area of study once they set foot in the US. An agent of the Iranian regime, for instance, may get a visa to study English in the US, but once he arrives, he can switch that major to study nuclear physics, to help his regime obtain nuclear weapons.
Recently, in the middle of a speech at a conference in Europe about the threats of radical jihadist groups, a young imam stood up and vehemently voiced his objection to my remarks. At the end of the conference, the imam and several of his followers came forward. The imam insisted that Americans should be educated about Sharia law.
One of the imam's followers spoke up, his voice filled with excitement as he described how they had just entered Europe and their next destination was the US. When asked what their experience was like traveling to Europe, the man responded with a tone of gloating in his voice.
"It was very easy," he said. "We came here on a student visa, and we will be in the US on another student visa!"
What the man claimed was tragically true. Many Islamists have become adept at manipulating the flaws in the immigration system and have found ways of taking advantage of any legal loopholes.
The breach should concern everyone: any prospective jihadists can easily abuse the immigration system by coming to the US on a student visa. All he needs to do is apply to some US universities, receive a letter of admission, then take it to the closest US embassy as a credible document for obtaining an F-1 student visa.
Those jihadists who desire to hide their origins or find it more difficult to get into the US universities, simply get a student visa from a European country; then, after they are in Europe, it is easier to obtain a student visa to move to the US. Unfortunately, some intelligence and immigration officials believe that since these people have already entered Europe, then they are less of a risk because they have "passed" some security screening.
When students from countries that harbor jihadists and Islamists attempt to get a student visa, they are not fully vetted for whether they sympathize and support jihadist extremist groups. The background screening of these jihadists is at best inadequate, and at worst pathetic. It is extremely difficult, if not impossible, to obtain any genuine information on their background. A few minutes of an interview in the embassy, a quick review of the applications, and an ineffective check of the names against the normally outdated database of people of concern, are totally insufficient tools to detect whoever wants to come to the US to support Islamist groups, commit terrorism, or harm Americans.
The Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS; an agency of the U.S. Department of Justice until 2003) admitted that there are so many visas granted each year across the world that it is impossible to check the background of every single applicant.
Recall that some of the September 11 attackers entered the United States using student visas. Not long ago, according the Department of Justice, four university students from Ohio and Illinois were indicted for providing support to Al Qaeda.
Worse, jihadists do not even need to obtain a university admission to set foot in the US. They can get a student visa by obtaining admission from a school to learn English.
Once these jihadists set foot in the country, they move around as they wish: there is no mechanism to check whether they are attending their schools or not. No one is adequately monitoring their actions or whereabouts.
In addition, many of these Islamists can alter their area of study once they set foot in the US. An agent of the Iranian regime, for instance, may get a visa to study English in the US, but once he arrives, he can switch that major to study nuclear physics, to help his regime obtain nuclear weapons.
Considering the risk posed to all Americans, it seems perfectly reasonable to ask, why should the US give visas to people who hate America and support Islamist regimes?
Moreover, both terrorist groups such as ISIS and anti-American regimes such as Iran actively target Muslim students who are already in the US. They may attempt to recruit them, or use them to glean information about the US. Many students are also radicalized through social media and the internet.
Finally, once these Islamists enter the US with student visas, many can overstay their visa in the knowledge that it is extremely unlikely that they will be deported.
Again, the terrorists responsible for the 1993 World Trade Center bombing were living in the US with expired student visas for years before the attack.
According to the US Department of Homeland Security, there were approximately 739,000 immigrants who overstayed their visas last year. Roughly 80,000 of those were foreign students.
According to the director of policy studies for the Center for Immigration Studies, Jessica M. Vaughan:
"Foreign students have one of the highest rates of overstaying visas of any category -- much higher even than tourist visas. It's one of the favorite visas for terrorists to try to obtain, because it offers a longer duration of stay."
Why should those who come from places that breed and encourage terrorism, anti-Americanism and anti-Semitism be able to obtain student visas with such ease? Closing the loopholes and stopping the mismanagement of issuing student visas should be one of the highest priorities of the American national security agencies -- before another terrorist attack takes the lives of innocent citizens and upends the entire nation again.
**Dr. Majid Rafizadeh, is a business strategist and advisor, Harvard-educated scholar, political scientist, board member of Harvard International Review, and president of the International American Council on the Middle East. He has authored books on Islam and US Foreign Policy. He can be reached at Dr.Rafizadeh@Post.Harvard.Edu.
© 2018 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.

Europe: Making Totalitarianism Great Again
Judith Bergman/Gatestone Institute/January 31/18
https://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/11814/europe-totalitarianism
The European Union has programs in place that seek heavily to influence mainstream news outlets and journalists with its own agendas -- such as that of continued mass-migration into Europe from Africa and the Middle East. For this purpose, the European Commission recently funded the publication of a handbook with guidelines for journalists on how to write about migrants and migration.
It is seemingly in the interest of these media representatives to label competition from alternative or new media, "fake news".
A proposed French law would allow authorities to block websites during election seasons, a draconian measure to combat political opponents, which would place France in the same category as countries such as China and Iran that block websites that do not suit the agendas of the regime.
The European Union is intensifying its efforts to censor and marginalize voices that disagree with its policies, under the convenient euphemism of combating "fake news".
"The Commission needs to look into the challenges the online platforms create for our democracies as regards the spreading of fake information and initiate a reflection on what would be needed at EU level to protect our citizens," wrote Jean-Claude Juncker, President of the European Commission, in May 2017. How considerate that Juncker, in totalitarian fashion, wishes to protect EU citizens from news that does not fit the Commission's narratives and agendas.
In October 2017, the European Commission announced its "fake news" policies and how it intends to "design solutions to address the spread of fake news". According to the Commission, "Fake news consists of intentional disinformation spread via online social platforms, broadcast news media or traditional print". Furthermore, according to the Commission, the EU's fake news policy is guided by, among other things, "the freedom of expression, media pluralism, and the right of citizens to diverse and reliable information".
This assurance of freedom of expression and pluralism comes across as rather laughable: the EU already does what it can to eliminate "media pluralism and... diverse and reliable information". The EU, for example, has programs in place -- such as the Rights, Equality and Citizenship Programme (REC) - - that seek heavily to influence European mainstream news outlets and their journalists with its own agendas -- such as that of continued mass-migration into Europe from Africa and the Middle East. For this purpose, the European Commission recently funded the publication of a handbook with guidelines for journalists on how to write about migrants and migration. The handbook was launched on October 12 by the International Press Institute (IPI) -- an association of media professionals representing leading digital, print and broadcast news outlets in more than 120 countries. Specifically, with regard to Muslims, the guidelines recommend:
"... Take care not to further stigmatise terms such as 'Muslim' or 'Islam' by associating them with particular acts... Don't allow extremists' claims about acting 'in the name of Islam' to stand unchallenged. Highlight... the diversity of Muslim communities..."
The EU also financially supports a campaign, "Media Against Hate" run by the European Federation of Journalists (EJF), the largest organization of journalists in Europe, which represents over 320,000 journalists across 43 countries. That campaign aims to:
"... improve media coverage related to migration, refugees, religion and marginalised groups... counter hate speech, intolerance, racism and discrimination... improve implementation of legal frameworks regulating hate speech and freedom of speech..."
To further its nascent "fake news" policies, the European Commission recently appointed 39 "experts" to a so-called "High Level Group (HLEG) on Fake News and online disinformation":
"It comprises representatives of the civil society, social media platforms, news media organisations, journalists and academia....
"The High Level group will advise the Commission on scoping the phenomenon of fake news, defining the roles and responsibilities of relevant stakeholders, grasping the international dimension, taking stock of the positions at stake, and formulating recommendations".
The media representatives have been almost exclusively picked from the mainstream media -- giants such as ARD, RTL, Swedish state television, Sky News, AFP and News Media Europe, which renders any sort of balanced outcome that these "experts" might reach a rather illusory option. To the extent that they even view new or alternative media as a threat, it is seemingly in the interest of these media representatives to label competition from alternative or new media, "fake news". The high-level group held its inaugural meeting on January 15, 2018.
The European Commission will poll EU citizens and conduct a Eurobarometer public opinion survey to be launched early 2018 "to measure and analyse the perceptions and concerns of the European citizens around fake news". The Commission will also be organizing a "multi-stakeholder conference on Fake News" which, will "define the boundaries of the problem, assess the effectiveness of the solutions already put in place by social media platforms and... agree on key principles for further action".
The EU is not alone in threatening the shutting down of free speech under the cover of combating "fake news". In France, President Emmanuel Macron has announced that he wants to introduce new legislation aimed at regulating "fake news" during election seasons, including "emergency legal actions" that would allow the French government to remove "fake news" from a website or block sites entirely. Macron said:
"If we want to protect liberal democracies, we must be strong and have clear rules. When fake news is spread, it will be possible to go to a judge ... and if appropriate, have content taken down, user accounts deleted and ultimately websites blocked."
A law like this would mean that the French state -- or whoever is placed in a position to act as thought police on its behalf -- would become the arbiter of what constitutes "truth", much in the same way as the new German censorship law requires social media networks to act as the privatized thought police of the German state.
The proposed French law, however, would go even further than the German censorship, in that it would allow French authorities to block entire websites during election seasons, a draconian measure to combat political opponents, which would place France in the same category as countries such as China and Iran that block websites that do not suit the agendas of the regime.
Such a French law would also be in violation of the right to freedom of expression and information guaranteed in Article 10 of the European Convention on Human Rights, to which France is a party, and the case law of the European Court of Human Rights. Article 10 states that everyone not only has the right to freedom of expression but "to receive and impart information and ideas without interference by public authority and regardless of frontiers..." Governments are not supposed to interfere in that right -- with a few specific exceptions described in Article 10 -- because such interference constitutes government censorship.
Overall, Europe appears to be aspiring to make totalitarianism great again.
Both European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker (left) and French President Emmanuel Macron (right) are proposing restrictions that would violate the right to freedom of expression and information that is guaranteed in the European Convention on Human Rights. (Image source: European Commission)
**Judith Bergman is a columnist, lawyer and political analyst.
© 2018 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.

The Khomeini regime and the Supreme Guide’s cane
Mashari Althaydi/Al Arabiya/January 31/18
In Europe, some have speculated, specifically those in agreement with Iran, that the Khomeini regime has survived the public’s recent protest storm, which sparked anger among the regime and its followers in Iraq, Syria, Lebanon and Yemen.
The Khomeini regime suffers from an infrastructural problem. It has lost its connection with the Iranians, mainly the youth, which make up the largest demographic bloc in the population. The issue is not a conspiracy from the Saudis or the Americans as Iranian propaganda like to claim, but indeed a flaw in the regime and those in charge of it. These are not my own words, but those of Iranian President Hassan Rouhani, in his indirect response to the Supreme Guide Khamenei’s statements made days after the protests – a time when he felt that his Revolutionary Guards will suppress the angry protesters.
It wasn’t Rouhani alone who said this, with pride and modesty that is, but also other symbolic figures who had served the regime or the “Khomeini Revolution” from its beginnings. It also included those who led the Green Revolution in 2009, Mousavi, Karroubi and others.
This revolution that erupted from within the regime, but soon died out after Barack Obama failed it, with his political pessimism and strategic patience. We later understood that the Green Movement’s failure in Iran and for the Syrians was a bribe to those who “serve” Khomeini regime in order to pass Obama’s deal with them.
System flaws
Flaws in the system will not be cured by Obama’s previous gifts, nor with his “White heirs” in Europe, because there’s a deep disease from the core. Mehdi Karoubi, the former president of the Iranian parliament and a leader of the Green Movement, a man who has been under house arrest for seven years, has openly attacked Iran’s Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei in a letter blaming him for the situation in Iran. This is because he has been at the core of Iranian responsibility, since the beginning of the Khomeini Revolution, occupying the posts of minister, president and a guide. The letter was published on Iranian news website “Saham News” affiliated with Etemad Meli or the National Trust Party, headed by Karoubi. Flaws in the system will not be cured by Obama’s previous gifts, nor with his “White heirs” in Europe, because there’s a deep disease from the core. In the letter, Karoubi -- a historical figure in the Khomeini Republic -- also recalled what Khomeini cautioned in the early years of the revolution. “You must be afraid of the day when people understand what you have in mind, then it’s going to be then end all of us,” he said. Karoubi strongly criticized Khamenei, saying that the political, economic, cultural and social situation in Iran is “a direct result of his strategic and operational policies.” He wrote to Khamenei saying: “The regime is now in a downward spiral.” We are not saying that the system will fall similarly to that of the Roman Ceausescu regime. However, the collapse is inevitable, bit by bit, even if it finally leaning on the Supreme Guide’s cane.

The bitter taste of Mosul
Christine Jamet/Al Arabiya/January 31/18
In an article published in the Independent on 17 January, the journalist Robert Fisk questions the delivery of care by medical aid groups embedded with the international coalition during the offensive on Mosul. He quotes one MSF member, Jonathan Whittall, who argued in a blog post in June, that the presence of for-profit organizations and military medical units was a threat to independent and humanitarian action. Echoing Whittall’s concerns, Fisk points out that humanitarian actors would be endangered by being perceived as aligned with other healthcare providers working in conjunction with the Coalition’s goal. We think that this analysis is a smokescreen which is evading the main challenges faced by humanitarian actors in Mosul.
This article is co-written by Isabelle Defourny.
It is a fact that during the offensive to regain Mosul from ISIS forces, MSF did not have a monopoly on medical assistance. The medical pathway for the wounded had been organized by the Iraqi government, international donors and the UN at the same time as they plotted military scenarios. A whole chain of medical referrals was set up, which included the wounded being evacuated from the front lines by Iraqi forces, being stabilized and subsequently being referred to secondary and tertiary medical facilities. Implementing partners were hired by the World Health Organization and included private health providers who were ready to work close to the frontlines and to be embedded with military personnel. MSF was not one of those implementing partners. But we did not make this choice for fear of being perceived as too close to Iraqi forces. In fact, as in every war situation, we had no choice but to negotiate with the armed forces exercising actual control over the territory. With Mosul, because our attempts to engage in dialogue with ISIS had long since faltered, we were only able to work on one side of the conflict. It was with the Iraqi armed forces and their allied militias that we negotiated our access to the territories and the population, and that we negotiated the security of our teams. How could it have been otherwise, since they were the ones manning the checkpoints, and controlling the areas where we ran our activities?
On the battlefield
MSF staff assessed multiple locations along the front lines and concluded that it was simply too dangerous. Mines, drone attacks, explosions, airstrikes, snipers, possible chemical attacks – these were the tangible threats putting the lives of tens of thousands of civilians and humanitarian workers at risk. During a time when there were no functioning hospitals in Mosul, it became clear that it would be most pertinent to provide a wide range of health services (surgical and post-operative care, an inpatient feeding program, maternal healthcare and other lifesaving medical emergencies) to displaced people and local resident populations in safer locations away from the frontlines but still close enough to ensure a timely response.
Certainly, the arrival of new aid groups on the frontlines, such as the ones described by Robert Fisk, did create multiple questions: who they were, how they operated, how they conducted the triage of their patients. But the primary issue at stake in Mosul was not the danger that these groups represented to a pure and principled humanitarianism
A few weeks after the start of the offensive on the west of the city, MSF teams were struggling to help civilians who had managed to escape ISIS snipers, the Iraqi ground offensive and the coalition’s airstrikes. Many of our patients were in need of urgent, lifesaving surgery. Entire families were wounded by the same mortar shell, the same mine explosion, the same airstrike. Just one month after the launch of the offensive on West Mosul, we had already received as many wounded as during the entire battle for East Mosul, which lasted three months. Virtually all of the wounded we received had been referred to us by the network of trauma stabilization points coordinated by the Iraqi government and the UN. Many patients did not survive due to the severity of their wounds. Inpatient capacity was over-stretched and post-operative care insufficient. Many escapees were psychologically traumatized by their experiences, first in ISIS-held territories and then in besieged Mosul, as well as afraid for their future, in a context where many were considered to be ISIS accomplices. In such circumstances, MSF’s ability to provide medical care on the basis of needs alone, and to give priority to the most urgent cases, was often put to the test. In Qayarah hospital for example, 60 km south of Mosul, we started to receive patient-detainees brought by various Iraqi authorities from detention centres, with many showing clear signs of ill-treatment and some in a very severe condition. Our medical teams did not know on what grounds the patients had been arrested, the conditions in which they were being held, or the criteria on which they were sent to us; nor did we know what happened to them once Iraqi authorities had returned them to the detention centers. The only assistance that MSF staff could provide to this group of detainees was medical care. And that is what we did. This situation highlights that our operations during this conflict did not take place without raising a great number of questions, but the questions were generally not related to the presence of private and military medical organizations at the frontlines.
During the final phase of the offensive on the Old City of Mosul, ISIS members were squeezed into a small, confined part of the city which was still inhabited by large numbers of civilians. Despite this, heavy bombing of the Old City was authorized. The patients treated in the aftermath had injuries ranging from shrapnel wounds, gunshots and blast injuries to burns and broken bones caused by collapsing buildings. With the city under siege, those civilians who did manage to flee reported a situation of extreme deprivation, with almost no food and water. This planned sacrifice of thousands of trapped civilians was the result of the encirclement of Old Mosul.
Certainly, the arrival of new aid groups on the frontlines, such as the ones described by Robert Fisk, did create multiple questions: who they were, how they operated, how they conducted the triage of their patients. But the primary issue at stake in Mosul was not the danger that these groups represented to a pure and principled humanitarianism. Although we were not aligned to the coalition’s objectives, although we were not an implementing partner of the UN, we were, however, a de facto component of the offensive’s damage control plan: by assisting those civilians who managed to escape, and by being powerless to do anything for those civilians condemned to die with ISIS militants inside the besieged town. That is the bitter taste of humanitarianism in Mosul’s war.

In the wake of Trump’s Mideast policy, neutrality doesn’t help
Walid Jawad/Al Arabiya/January 31/18
Donald Trump’s diplomatic style looks different than the political minefield, which virtually every American president had tried to navigate over the life of American engagement in the Palestinian–Israeli conflict. Tallying up the scorecard reveals the abysmal progress over decades of prodding the parties toward a viable and lasting peace. Trump’s remarks on Thursday in Davos, Switzerland ahead of his meeting with Israel’s Netanyahu saying that “We’ll see what happens with the peace process but respect has to be shown to the US or we'll just not going any further” is tantamount to inserting the US as a secondary party to the conflict. This statement forces Palestinian negotiators to redirect their attention to managing the hostile dynamic with the US instead of focusing on Israel, the other party to the conflict. But are Trump’s declarations combined with cutting off aid to the Palestinians bad things? I don’t think so. It is better for all parties to drop their masks and negotiate on truthful and realistic grounds. I would have given Trump credit for his courage to reposition the US role in a way that mirrors reality, but unfortunately he didn’t.
Break the cycle
It seems that Trump in his attempt to break the cycle of failed US policies toward the Palestinian-Israeli conflict took Jerusalem off of the negotiations table, as it were. Trump recognized Jerusalem as the capital of Israel, which prejudice final negotiations between the conflicting parties. Further, he cut aid pledged to the UN fund for Palestinian refugees down to $60 million while aid to Israel continues at $3.8 billion (yes, that’s with a “B”) a year. Trump summarizes the intent behind his policies by saying that the Palestinians are “going to have to want to make peace, or we're going to have nothing to do with them any longer.” Two things must be kept in mind here; one, that whatever the US policy is for now is tied to the Trump administration. The new American position will be revealed with a new president in 2020 or 2024. The challenge is for the Palestinians to avoid losing much ground until then. Two, that the court of public opinion has rendered its verdict judging for the Palestinians. This is a rare opportunity for them to present a different Palestinian face, one that is reasonable, calm and principled in achieving a better future for its citizens on the basis of justice and peaceful resistance. The Palestinian cause has been overshadowed by violent resistance over the decades. The morality discussion over this point is irrelevant because violence was and continues to be a failed strategy on any level.
Soft power is more effective in the digital age we live in. Perhaps it is a lesson that can be learned from nefarious actors, be it the Russian model in influencing American public opinion during the presidential elections or Jihadist decentralized digital warriors who created their own online strategy without getting clearances or authorizations from their leaders, some were not even members of any terrorist group. Palestinians have a story to share and it is time to create relatable human suffering and perseverance that people around the world, specially Americans, can sympathize with. Palestinians can look at the Jewish model in the US to see how they did it. There is almost no an American child who does not know Anne Frank; the young Jewish diarist who was murdered by the Nazis in the holocaust, a story that we all have sympathy for.
The US will remain the most influential player beyond the conflicting parties and must be accounted for as such. Therefore, Palestinians must understand and approach the American political system with a strategic eye and should deal with Trump through his own framework and strategy.
No publishers needed. Create stories and visual materials through social media campaigns by empowering the people to tell their own stories. Once the word “Palestinian” confers a human image of quiet pride and reasonable demands, Americans will exert pressure on their elected officials to balance the political and financial support the US provides to Israel.
Although American sympathy for Israel remains around 46% while support for Palestinians at 16% according to the latest Pew Research Center poll published earlier this month, we notice a subtle change. There is an increased number of republicans who are now in support of Israel while more democrats are in favor of Palestinians; a noteworthy change that is not apparent in the overall percentage, which didn’t change much since 1978. The US will remain the most influential player beyond the conflicting parties and must be accounted for as such. Therefore, Palestinians must understand and approach the American political system with a strategic eye and should deal with Trump through his own framework and strategy.
Peace negotiations
Trump’s approach is confusing negotiating for money with negotiating for the dignity of a nation and the affirmation of Palestinians’ history and culture. The position of the Palestinians, as is that of the Israelis, is grounded in tangible demands that mimic positions negotiated by businessmen and women over bottom-line and monetary gains. But it couldn’t be farther from it. The oversimplification of the peace process by forcing a business-like approach upon the parties will inevitably cause the deepening of the conflict.
Engaging in peace negotiations is conditional upon parties’ voluntary willingness to come to the table. Otherwise, any possible agreement forced upon the process by coercing a party into negotiating under duress for the sole purpose of appeasing the facilitator becomes null and void. Palestinian negotiators have to answer to their people when and if an agreement is reached. The two-state solution is increasingly becoming unrealistic. The latest Israeli position suggests institutionally legitimizing apartheid. If Israel wants the authority to control security over the Palestinians for the purpose of protecting itself, then it must balance its authority with an equivalent level of responsibility toward the Palestinians. Israel must accept its role as an occupying force. In light of its refusal to allow Palestinians the right of self-determination it must absorb the people of historic Palestine as Israeli citizens with full rights and responsibilities.

Full Text: Trump’s State of the Union address/النص الكامل لخطاب الرئيس ترامب الإتحادي
Fox News January 31/18
http://eliasbejjaninews.com/archives/62220
The following is President Trump’s State of the Union address, as prepared for delivery:
Mr. Speaker, Mr. Vice President, Members of Congress, the First Lady of the United States, and my fellow Americans:
Less than 1 year has passed since I first stood at this podium, in this majestic chamber, to speak on behalf of the American People — and to address their concerns, their hopes, and their dreams. That night, our new Administration had already taken swift action. A new tide of optimism was already sweeping across our land.
Each day since, we have gone forward with a clear vision and a righteous mission — to make America great again for all Americans.
Over the last year, we have made incredible progress and achieved extraordinary success. We have faced challenges we expected, and others we could never have imagined. We have shared in the heights of victory and the pains of hardship. We endured floods and fires and storms. But through it all, we have seen the beauty of America’s soul, and the steel in America’s spine.
Each test has forged new American heroes to remind us who we are, and show us what we can be. We saw the volunteers of the “Cajun Navy,” racing to the rescue with their fishing boats to save people in the aftermath of a devastating hurricane. We saw strangers shielding strangers from a hail of gunfire on the Las Vegas strip.
We heard tales of Americans like Coast Guard Petty Officer Ashlee Leppert, who is here tonight in the gallery with Melania. Ashlee was aboard one of the first helicopters on the scene in Houston during Hurricane Harvey. Through 18 hours of wind and rain, Ashlee braved live power lines and deep water, to help save more than 40 lives. Thank you, Ashlee.
We heard about Americans like firefighter David Dahlberg. He is here with us too. David faced down walls of flame to rescue almost 60 children trapped at a California summer camp threatened by wildfires.
To everyone still recovering in Texas, Florida, Louisiana, Puerto Rico, the Virgin Islands, California, and everywhere else — we are with you, we love you, and we will pull through together.
Some trials over the past year touched this chamber very personally. With us tonight is one of the toughest people ever to serve in this House — a guy who took a bullet, almost died, and was back to work three and a half months later: the legend from Louisiana, Congressman Steve Scalise.
Trump uses his State of the Union address to acknowledge ‘one of the toughest people ever to serve in this House,’ calls on lawmakers to set aside differences, seek out common ground and deliver for the American people.
We are incredibly grateful for the heroic efforts of the Capitol Police Officers, the Alexandria Police, and the doctors, nurses, and paramedics who saved his life, and the lives of many others in this room.
In the aftermath of that terrible shooting, we came together, not as Republicans or Democrats, but as representatives of the people. But it is not enough to come together only in times of tragedy. Tonight, I call upon all of us to set aside our differences, to seek out common ground, and to summon the unity we need to deliver for the people we were elected to serve.
Over the last year, the world has seen what we always knew: that no people on Earth are so fearless, or daring, or determined as Americans. If there is a mountain, we climb it. If there is a frontier, we cross it. If there is a challenge, we tame it. If there is an opportunity, we seize it.
So let us begin tonight by recognizing that the state of our Union is strong because our people are strong. And together, we are building a safe, strong, and proud America. Since the election, we have created 2.4 million new jobs, including 200,000 new jobs in manufacturing alone. After years of wage stagnation, we are finally seeing rising wages.
Unemployment claims have hit a 45-year low. African-American unemployment stands at the lowest rate ever recorded, and Hispanic American unemployment has also reached the lowest levels in history.
Small business confidence is at an all-time high. The stock market has smashed one record after another, gaining $8 trillion in value. That is great news for Americans’ 401k, retirement, pension, and college savings accounts.
And just as I promised the American people from this podium 11 months ago, we enacted the biggest tax cuts and reforms in American history. Our massive tax cuts provide tremendous relief for the middle class and small businesses.
To lower tax rates for hardworking Americans, we nearly doubled the standard deduction for everyone. Now, the first $24,000 earned by a married couple is completely tax-free. We also doubled the child tax credit.
A typical family of four making $75,000 will see their tax bill reduced by $2,000 — slashing their tax bill in half.
This April will be the last time you ever file under the old broken system — and millions of Americans will have more take-home pay starting next month.
We eliminated an especially cruel tax that fell mostly on Americans making less than $50,000 a year — forcing them to pay tremendous penalties simply because they could not afford government-ordered health plans. We repealed the core of disastrous Obamacare — the individual mandate is now gone.
President Trump says Republicans eliminated an ‘especially cruel tax’ that fell mostly on Americans making less than $50,000 a year and repealed the ‘core of disastrous ObamaCare.’
We slashed the business tax rate from 35 percent all the way down to 21 percent, so American companies can compete and win against anyone in the world. These changes alone are estimated to increase average family income by more than $4,000.
Small businesses have also received a massive tax cut, and can now deduct 20 percent of their business income. Here tonight are Steve Staub and Sandy Keplinger of Staub Manufacturing — a small business in Ohio. They have just finished the best year in their 20-year history. Because of tax reform, they are handing out raises, hiring an additional 14 people, and expanding into the building next door.
One of Staub’s employees, Corey Adams, is also with us tonight. Corey is an all-American worker. He supported himself through high school, lost his job during the 2008 recession, and was later hired by Staub, where he trained to become a welder. Like many hardworking Americans, Corey plans to invest his tax cut raise into his new home and his two daughters’ education. Please join me in congratulating Corey.
Since we passed tax cuts, roughly 3 million workers have already gotten tax cut bonuses — many of them thousands of dollars per worker. Apple has just announced it plans to invest a total of $350 billion in America, and hire another 20,000 workers. This is our new American moment. There has never been a better time to start living the American Dream. So to every citizen watching at home tonight — no matter where you have been, or where you come from, this is your time. If you work hard, if you believe in yourself, if you believe in America, then you can dream anything, you can be anything, and together, we can achieve anything.
Tonight, I want to talk about what kind of future we are going to have, and what kind of Nation we are going to be. All of us, together, as one team, one people, and one American family.
We all share the same home, the same heart, the same destiny, and the same great American flag.
Together, we are rediscovering the American way.
In America, we know that faith and family, not government and bureaucracy, are the center of the American life. Our motto is “in God we trust.”And we celebrate our police, our military, and our amazing veterans as heroes who deserve our total and unwavering support.
Here tonight is Preston Sharp, a 12-year-old boy from Redding, California, who noticed that veterans’ graves were not marked with flags on Veterans Day. He decided to change that, and started a movement that has now placed 40,000 flags at the graves of our great heroes. Preston: a job well done.
Young patriots like Preston teach all of us about our civic duty as Americans. Preston’s reverence for those who have served our Nation reminds us why we salute our flag, why we put our hands on our hearts for the pledge of allegiance, and why we proudly stand for the national anthem.
Americans love their country. And they deserve a Government that shows them the same love and loyalty in return.
For the last year we have sought to restore the bonds of trust between our citizens and their Government.
Working with the Senate, we are appointing judges who will interpret the Constitution as written, including a great new Supreme Court Justice, and more circuit court judges than any new administration in the history of our country.
We are defending our Second Amendment, and have taken historic actions to protect religious liberty.
And we are serving our brave veterans, including giving our veterans choice in their healthcare decisions. Last year, the Congress passed, and I signed, the landmark VA Accountability Act. Since its passage, my Administration has already removed more than 1,500 VA employees who failed to give our veterans the care they deserve — and we are hiring talented people who love our vets as much as we do.
I will not stop until our veterans are properly taken care of, which has been my promise to them from the very beginning of this great journey.
All Americans deserve accountability and respect — and that is what we are giving them. So tonight, I call on the Congress to empower every Cabinet Secretary with the authority to reward good workers — and to remove Federal employees who undermine the public trust or fail the American people.
In our drive to make Washington accountable, we have eliminated more regulations in our first year than any administration in history.
We have ended the war on American Energy — and we have ended the war on clean coal. We are now an exporter of energy to the world.
In Detroit, I halted Government mandates that crippled America’s autoworkers — so we can get the Motor City revving its engines once again.
Many car companies are now building and expanding plants in the United States — something we have not seen for decades. Chrysler is moving a major plant from Mexico to Michigan; Toyota and Mazda are opening up a plant in Alabama. Soon, plants will be opening up all over the country. This is all news Americans are unaccustomed to hearing — for many years, companies and jobs were only leaving us. But now they are coming back.
Exciting progress is happening every day.
To speed access to breakthrough cures and affordable generic drugs, last year the FDA approved more new and generic drugs and medical devices than ever before in our history.
We also believe that patients with terminal conditions should have access to experimental treatments that could potentially save their lives.
People who are terminally ill should not have to go from country to country to seek a cure — I want to give them a chance right here at home. It is time for the Congress to give these wonderful Americans the “right to try.”
President Trump says terminally ill patients should have access to experimental treatments that could potentially save their lives and should not have to go from country to country to seek a cure.
One of my greatest priorities is to reduce the price of prescription drugs. In many other countries, these drugs cost far less than what we pay in the United States. That is why I have directed my Administration to make fixing the injustice of high drug prices one of our top priorities. Prices will come down.
America has also finally turned the page on decades of unfair trade deals that sacrificed our prosperity and shipped away our companies, our jobs, and our Nation’s wealth.
The era of economic surrender is over.
From now on, we expect trading relationships to be fair and to be reciprocal.
We will work to fix bad trade deals and negotiate new ones.
And we will protect American workers and American intellectual property, through strong enforcement of our trade rules.
As we rebuild our industries, it is also time to rebuild our crumbling infrastructure.
America is a nation of builders. We built the Empire State Building in just 1 year — is it not a disgrace that it can now take 10 years just to get a permit approved for a simple road?
I am asking both parties to come together to give us the safe, fast, reliable, and modern infrastructure our economy needs and our people deserve.
Tonight, I am calling on the Congress to produce a bill that generates at least $1.5 trillion for the new infrastructure investment we need.
Every Federal dollar should be leveraged by partnering with State and local governments and, where appropriate, tapping into private sector investment — to permanently fix the infrastructure deficit.
Any bill must also streamline the permitting and approval process — getting it down to no more than two years, and perhaps even one.
Together, we can reclaim our building heritage. We will build gleaming new roads, bridges, highways, railways, and waterways across our land. And we will do it with American heart, American hands, and American grit.
We want every American to know the dignity of a hard day’s work. We want every child to be safe in their home at night. And we want every citizen to be proud of this land that we love.
We can lift our citizens from welfare to work, from dependence to independence, and from poverty to prosperity.
As tax cuts create new jobs, let us invest in workforce development and job training. Let us open great vocational schools so our future workers can learn a craft and realize their full potential. And let us support working families by supporting paid family leave.
As America regains its strength, this opportunity must be extended to all citizens. That is why this year we will embark on reforming our prisons to help former inmates who have served their time get a second chance.
Struggling communities, especially immigrant communities, will also be helped by immigration policies that focus on the best interests of American workers and American families.
For decades, open borders have allowed drugs and gangs to pour into our most vulnerable communities. They have allowed millions of low-wage workers to compete for jobs and wages against the poorest Americans. Most tragically, they have caused the loss of many innocent lives.
President Trump says Americans are grieving for Evelyn Rodriguez, Freddy Cuevas, Elizabeth Alvarado and Robert Mickens whose daughters Kayla Cuevas and Nisa Mickens were killed on Long Island.
Here tonight are two fathers and two mothers: Evelyn Rodriguez, Freddy Cuevas, Elizabeth Alvarado, and Robert Mickens. Their two teenage daughters — Kayla Cuevas and Nisa Mickens — were close friends on Long Island. But in September 2016, on the eve of Nisa’s 16th Birthday, neither of them came home. These two precious girls were brutally murdered while walking together in their hometown. Six members of the savage gang MS-13 have been charged with Kayla and Nisa’s murders. Many of these gang members took advantage of glaring loopholes in our laws to enter the country as unaccompanied alien minors – and wound up in Kayla and Nisa’s high school.
Evelyn, Elizabeth, Freddy, and Robert: Tonight, everyone in this chamber is praying for you. Everyone in America is grieving for you. And 320 million hearts are breaking for you. We cannot imagine the depth of your sorrow, but we can make sure that other families never have to endure this pain.
Tonight, I am calling on the Congress to finally close the deadly loopholes that have allowed MS-13, and other criminals, to break into our country. We have proposed new legislation that will fix our immigration laws, and support our ICE and Border Patrol Agents, so that this cannot ever happen again.
The United States is a compassionate nation. We are proud that we do more than any other country to help the needy, the struggling, and the underprivileged all over the world. But as President of the United States, my highest loyalty, my greatest compassion, and my constant concern is for America’s children, America’s struggling workers, and America’s forgotten communities. I want our youth to grow up to achieve great things. I want our poor to have their chance to rise.
So tonight, I am extending an open hand to work with members of both parties — Democrats and Republicans — to protect our citizens of every background, color, religion, and creed. My duty, and the sacred duty of every elected official in this chamber, is to defend Americans — to protect their safety, their families, their communities, and their right to the American Dream. Because Americans are dreamers too.
Here tonight is one leader in the effort to defend our country: Homeland Security Investigations Special Agent Celestino Martinez — he goes by C.J. C.J. served 15 years in the Air Force before becoming an ICE agent and spending the last 15 years fighting gang violence and getting dangerous criminals off our streets. At one point, MS-13 leaders ordered C.J.’s murder. But he did not cave to threats or fear. Last May, he commanded an operation to track down gang members on Long Island. His team has arrested nearly 400, including more than 220 from MS-13.
C.J.: Great work. Now let us get the Congress to send you some reinforcements.
Over the next few weeks, the House and Senate will be voting on an immigration reform package.
In recent months, my Administration has met extensively with both Democrats and Republicans to craft a bipartisan approach to immigration reform. Based on these discussions, we presented the Congress with a detailed proposal that should be supported by both parties as a fair compromise — one where nobody gets everything they want, but where our country gets the critical reforms it needs.
Here are the four pillars of our plan:
The first pillar of our framework generously offers a path to citizenship for 1.8 million illegal immigrants who were brought here by their parents at a young age — that covers almost three times more people than the previous administration. Under our plan, those who meet education and work requirements, and show good moral character, will be able to become full citizens of the United States.
The second pillar fully secures the border. That means building a wall on the Southern border, and it means hiring more heroes like C.J. to keep our communities safe. Crucially, our plan closes the terrible loopholes exploited by criminals and terrorists to enter our country — and it finally ends the dangerous practice of “catch and release.”
The third pillar ends the visa lottery — a program that randomly hands out green cards without any regard for skill, merit, or the safety of our people. It is time to begin moving towards a merit-based immigration system — one that admits people who are skilled, who want to work, who will contribute to our society, and who will love and respect our country.
The fourth and final pillar protects the nuclear family by ending chain migration. Under the current broken system, a single immigrant can bring in virtually unlimited numbers of distant relatives. Under our plan, we focus on the immediate family by limiting sponsorships to spouses and minor children. This vital reform is necessary, not just for our economy, but for our security, and our future.
In recent weeks, two terrorist attacks in New York were made possible by the visa lottery and chain migration. In the age of terrorism, these programs present risks we can no longer afford.
It is time to reform these outdated immigration rules, and finally bring our immigration system into the 21st century.
These four pillars represent a down-the-middle compromise, and one that will create a safe, modern, and lawful immigration system.
For over 30 years, Washington has tried and failed to solve this problem. This Congress can be the one that finally makes it happen.
Most importantly, these four pillars will produce legislation that fulfills my ironclad pledge to only sign a bill that puts America first. So let us come together, set politics aside, and finally get the job done.
These reforms will also support our response to the terrible crisis of opioid and drug addiction.
In 2016, we lost 64,000 Americans to drug overdoses: 174 deaths per day. Seven per hour. We must get much tougher on drug dealers and pushers if we are going to succeed in stopping this scourge.
My Administration is committed to fighting the drug epidemic and helping get treatment for those in need. The struggle will be long and difficult — but, as Americans always do, we will prevail.
As we have seen tonight, the most difficult challenges bring out the best in America.
We see a vivid expression of this truth in the story of the Holets family of New Mexico. Ryan Holets is 27 years old, and an officer with the Albuquerque Police Department. He is here tonight with his wife Rebecca. Last year, Ryan was on duty when he saw a pregnant, homeless woman preparing to inject heroin. When Ryan told her she was going to harm her unborn child, she began to weep. She told him she did not know where to turn, but badly wanted a safe home for her baby.
In that moment, Ryan said he felt God speak to him: “You will do it — because you can.” He took out a picture of his wife and their four kids. Then, he went home to tell his wife Rebecca. In an instant, she agreed to adopt. The Holets named their new daughter Hope.
Ryan and Rebecca: You embody the goodness of our Nation. Thank you, and congratulations.
As we rebuild America’s strength and confidence at home, we are also restoring our strength and standing abroad.
Around the world, we face rogue regimes, terrorist groups, and rivals like China and Russia that challenge our interests, our economy, and our values. In confronting these dangers, we know that weakness is the surest path to conflict, and unmatched power is the surest means of our defense.
For this reason, I am asking the Congress to end the dangerous defense sequester and fully fund our great military.
As part of our defense, we must modernize and rebuild our nuclear arsenal, hopefully never having to use it, but making it so strong and powerful that it will deter any acts of aggression. Perhaps someday in the future there will be a magical moment when the countries of the world will get together to eliminate their nuclear weapons. Unfortunately, we are not there yet.
Last year, I also pledged that we would work with our allies to extinguish ISIS from the face of the Earth. One year later, I am proud to report that the coalition to defeat ISIS has liberated almost 100 percent of the territory once held by these killers in Iraq and Syria. But there is much more work to be done. We will continue our fight until ISIS is defeated.
Army Staff Sergeant Justin Peck is here tonight. Near Raqqa last November, Justin and his comrade, Chief Petty Officer Kenton Stacy, were on a mission to clear buildings that ISIS had rigged with explosives so that civilians could return to the city.
Clearing the second floor of a vital hospital, Kenton Stacy was severely wounded by an explosion. Immediately, Justin bounded into the booby-trapped building and found Kenton in bad shape. He applied pressure to the wound and inserted a tube to reopen an airway. He then performed CPR for 20 straight minutes during the ground transport and maintained artificial respiration through 2 hours of emergency surgery.
Kenton Stacy would have died if not for Justin’s selfless love for a fellow warrior. Tonight, Kenton is recovering in Texas. Raqqa is liberated. And Justin is wearing his new Bronze Star, with a “V” for “Valor.” Staff Sergeant Peck: All of America salutes you.
Terrorists who do things like place bombs in civilian hospitals are evil. When possible, we annihilate them. When necessary, we must be able to detain and question them. But we must be clear: Terrorists are not merely criminals. They are unlawful enemy combatants. And when captured overseas, they should be treated like the terrorists they are.
In the past, we have foolishly released hundreds of dangerous terrorists, only to meet them again on the battlefield — including the ISIS leader, al-Baghdadi.
So today, I am keeping another promise. I just signed an order directing Secretary Mattis to reexamine our military detention policy and to keep open the detention facilities at Guantánamo Bay.
I am also asking the Congress to ensure that, in the fight against ISIS and Al Qaeda, we continue to have all necessary power to detain terrorists — wherever we chase them down.
Our warriors in Afghanistan also have new rules of engagement. Along with their heroic Afghan partners, our military is no longer undermined by artificial timelines, and we no longer tell our enemies our plans.
Last month, I also took an action endorsed unanimously by the Senate just months before: I recognized Jerusalem as the capital of Israel.
Shortly afterwards, dozens of countries voted in the United Nations General Assembly against America’s sovereign right to make this recognition. American taxpayers generously send those same countries billions of dollars in aid every year.
That is why, tonight, I am asking the Congress to pass legislation to help ensure American foreign-assistance dollars always serve American interests, and only go to America’s friends.
As we strengthen friendships around the world, we are also restoring clarity about our adversaries.
When the people of Iran rose up against the crimes of their corrupt dictatorship, I did not stay silent. America stands with the people of Iran in their courageous struggle for freedom.
I am asking the Congress to address the fundamental flaws in the terrible Iran nuclear deal.
My Administration has also imposed tough sanctions on the communist and socialist dictatorships in Cuba and Venezuela.
But no regime has oppressed its own citizens more totally or brutally than the cruel dictatorship in North Korea.
North Korea’s reckless pursuit of nuclear missiles could very soon threaten our homeland.
We are waging a campaign of maximum pressure to prevent that from happening.
Past experience has taught us that complacency and concessions only invite aggression and provocation. I will not repeat the mistakes of past administrations that got us into this dangerous position.
We need only look at the depraved character of the North Korean regime to understand the nature of the nuclear threat it could pose to America and our allies.
Otto Warmbier was a hardworking student at the University of Virginia. On his way to study abroad in Asia, Otto joined a tour to North Korea. At its conclusion, this wonderful young man was arrested and charged with crimes against the state. After a shameful trial, the dictatorship sentenced Otto to 15 years of hard labor, before returning him to America last June — horribly injured and on the verge of death. He passed away just days after his return.
Otto’s Parents, Fred and Cindy Warmbier, are with us tonight — along with Otto’s brother and sister, Austin and Greta. You are powerful witnesses to a menace that threatens our world, and your strength inspires us all. Tonight, we pledge to honor Otto’s memory with American resolve.
Finally, we are joined by one more witness to the ominous nature of this regime. His name is Mr. Ji Seong-ho.
In 1996, Seong-ho was a starving boy in North Korea. One day, he tried to steal coal from a railroad car to barter for a few scraps of food. In the process, he passed out on the train tracks, exhausted from hunger. He woke up as a train ran over his limbs. He then endured multiple amputations without anything to dull the pain. His brother and sister gave what little food they had to help him recover and ate dirt themselves — permanently stunting their own growth. Later, he was tortured by North Korean authorities after returning from a brief visit to China. His tormentors wanted to know if he had met any Christians. He had — and he resolved to be free.
Seong-ho traveled thousands of miles on crutches across China and Southeast Asia to freedom. Most of his family followed. His father was caught trying to escape, and was tortured to death.
Today he lives in Seoul, where he rescues other defectors, and broadcasts into North Korea what the regime fears the most – the truth.
Today he has a new leg, but Seong-ho, I understand you still keep those crutches as a reminder of how far you have come. Your great sacrifice is an inspiration to us all.
Seong-ho’s story is a testament to the yearning of every human soul to live in freedom.
It was that same yearning for freedom that nearly 250 years ago gave birth to a special place called America. It was a small cluster of colonies caught between a great ocean and a vast wilderness. But it was home to an incredible people with a revolutionary idea: that they could rule themselves. That they could chart their own destiny. And that, together, they could light up the world.
That is what our country has always been about. That is what Americans have always stood for, always strived for, and always done.
Atop the dome of this Capitol stands the Statue of Freedom. She stands tall and dignified among the monuments to our ancestors who fought and lived and died to protect her.
Monuments to Washington and Jefferson — to Lincoln and King.
Memorials to the heroes of Yorktown and Saratoga — to young Americans who shed their blood on the shores of Normandy, and the fields beyond. And others, who went down in the waters of the Pacific and the skies over Asia.
And freedom stands tall over one more monument: this one. This Capitol. This living monument to the American people.
A people whose heroes live not only in the past, but all around us — defending hope, pride, and the American way.
They work in every trade. They sacrifice to raise a family. They care for our children at home. They defend our flag abroad. They are strong moms and brave kids. They are firefighters, police officers, border agents, medics, and Marines.
But above all else, they are Americans. And this Capitol, this city, and this Nation, belong to them.
Our task is to respect them, to listen to them, to serve them, to protect them, and to always be worthy of them.
Americans fill the world with art and music. They push the bounds of science and discovery. And they forever remind us of what we should never forget: The people dreamed this country. The people built this country. And it is the people who are making America great again.
As long as we are proud of who we are, and what we are fighting for, there is nothing we cannot achieve.
As long as we have confidence in our values, faith in our citizens, and trust in our God, we will not fail.
Our families will thrive.
Our people will prosper.
And our Nation will forever be safe and strong and proud and mighty and free.
Thank you, and God bless America.