LCCC ENGLISH DAILY NEWS BULLETIN
June 13/2018
Compiled & Prepared by: Elias Bejjani

 

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Bible Quotations
Therefore prepare your minds for action; discipline yourselves; set all your hope on the grace that Jesus Christ will bring you when he is revealed
First Letter of Peter 01/10-16: "Concerning this salvation, the prophets who prophesied of the grace that was to be yours made careful search and inquiry, inquiring about the person or time that the Spirit of Christ within them indicated, when it testified in advance to the sufferings destined for Christ and the subsequent glory. It was revealed to them that they were serving not themselves but you, in regard to the things that have now been announced to you through those who brought you good news by the Holy Spirit sent from heaven things into which angels long to look! Therefore prepare your minds for action; discipline yourselves; set all your hope on the grace that Jesus Christ will bring you when he is revealed. Like obedient children, do not be conformed to the desires that you formerly had in ignorance. Instead, as he who called you is holy, be holy yourselves in all your conduct; for it is written, ‘You shall be holy, for I am holy.’"

Titles For Latest LCCC Bulletin analysis & editorials from miscellaneous sources published on June 12-13/18
My School's Imam: "We Love Western Anti-West Theories"/Majid Rafizadeh/Gatestone Institute/June 12/2018
We and our Friends in Italy and Spain/Eyad Abu Shakra/Asharq Al Awsat/June 12/18
10 Books for a Summer Reading List/Barry Ritholtz/Bloomberg/June 12/18
Has boycott of Qatar failed/Abdulrahman al-Rashed/Al Arabiya/June 12/18
Saving Jordan and discernment in speech/Abdullah bin Bijad Al-Otaibi/Al Arabiya/June 12/18
We and our friends in Italy and Spain/Eyad Abu Shakra/Al Arabiya/June 12/18
Anthony Bourdain: A personal eulogy to the man I never met/Walid Jawad/Al Arabiya/June 12/18

Titles For The Latest LCCC Lebanese Related News published on June 12-13/18
Lebanon: Anger over Soleimani’s Interference in Elections Results
UN Refugee Agency Hopes Lebanon Will Reverse Freeze on Residency Applications
Bassil Says Important to Preserve FPM-Hizbullah 'Strategic' Alliance
Report: 'Hizbullah-Linked' Moguls Exploiting UAE Real-Estate Market
Sayyed briefs Aoun after STL testimony
U.N. Says Respects Lebanon Sensitivities, Urges Unblocking of Residency Permits
Bassil on Soleimani's Remarks: We're Not Submissive to Anyone
Report: Hariri to Meet State Heads on Sidelines of World Cup Opening in Moscow
Geagea: LF's Govt. Share 'Not for Saudi Arabia'
Decomposed Body Found Near Fidar Bridge
Report: Bassil Escalates U.N. Refugee Staff Residency Permits Row
Lebanese Man Stranded for 42 Days in Ecuador Airport
Nadim Gemayel: Refugee Return Requires Coordination with Syrian Govt.

Titles For Latest LCCC Bulletin For Miscellaneous Reports And News published on June 12-13/18
Trump, Kim Meet at Historic Summit
Kim also sounded positive about the prospects.
IAEA Welcomes Trump-Kim Joint Statement After Historic Summit
Arrest of Gunman Ends Hostage Siege in Central Paris
Netanyahu Offers Iran Solutions for Water Crisis
Israeli Police Question Netanyahu for Third Time in Corruption Probe
Israeli Police Question Netanyahu for Third Time in Corruption Probe
Rouhani tells Macron: Impossible to stay in nuclear deal unless Iran benefits
Iraq’s Sadr and Amiri announce political alliance
Haider al-Abadi opposes repeat of Iraq elections
Germany Arrests Suspected Iraqi ISIS Member
US Ambassador to Israel Called Back to Washington for the 'Deal of the Century'
Egypt: 4 Terrorists Killed in Arish Clashes
PM-Designate Thanks Saudi Arabia, Kuwait and UAE for Supporting Jordan
7 Slightly Injured as Paris Suburban Train Overturns
Air Strike Kills 10 Civilians in Northeast Syria
Libya Strongman Advances in Battle to Take Eastern City
Yemen President in Rare Visit to Estranged UAE Ally
Anti-Rebel Forces Prepare for Yemen Port Attack despite U.N. Alarm
Casualties as Twin Suicide Attack Hits Eastern Libya
Israel Police Evict Wildcat Settlers as Deadline Looms
Statement by Canada’s Foreign Minister following United States-North Korea summit

Latest LCCC Lebanese Related News published on June 12-13/18
Lebanon: Anger over Soleimani’s Interference in Elections Results
Tuesday, 12 June, 2018/Beirut - Paula Astih/Asharq Al Awsat/Tuesday, 12 June, 2018/In his first comments on the results of the Lebanese parliamentary elections, the leader of the Quds Force in the Iranian Revolutionary Guards, Qassem Soleimani, said that for the first time, “Hezbollah” won 74 out of 128 parliamentary seats.The party has developed to become “a resistance state in Lebanon,” he declared. Based on his comments, Soleimani included the 29 deputies of the “Strong Lebanon” bloc, which is affiliated to President Michel Aoun, in the “Hezbollah” parliamentary bloc. In fact, the party only has 13 deputies represented in parliament, while the Amal movement has 17. “Lebanon’s recent election was a referendum. They came at a time when everybody was accusing ‘Hezbollah’ of interfering in Syria, Lebanon, Iraq, Yemen and the region as a whole,” Soleimani said. He added: “They described all [Hezbollah] supporters, even if they were Sunnis and others, as Iran’s agents, but these elections were not affected by these circumstances and the $200 million dollars that were spent” during the polls. The Iranian official’s comments drew immediate condemnation in Lebanon. Prime Minister-designate Saad Hariri described the statements as “regrettable.” “We would have liked to have state-to-state relations (with Iran) and if some have lost in Iraq, it does not mean they should seek to compensate for this loss somewhere else,” Hariri said following a meeting with President Michel Aoun on Monday. A Strong Lebanon deputy also criticized Soleimani’s comments, asserting that his bloc did not belong to a team against another. The Strong Lebanon bloc is the largest parliamentary bloc in the new parliament, with 29 deputies, 18 of whom are members in political parties. Researcher at Information International Mohammed Shamseddine said that the number of deputies, who can be classified as directly belonging to “Hezbollah” is 43. In comments to Asharq Al-Awsat, Shamseddine said: “Soleimani’s insistence on talking about 74 deputies is only symbolic.” The parliamentary elections, the first since 2009, were held on May 6.

UN Refugee Agency Hopes Lebanon Will Reverse Freeze on Residency Applications
Asharq Al-Awsat/Tuesday, 12 June, 2018/The UN refugee agency hoped on Tuesday that Lebanon would reverse its decision to freeze the residency applications of its staff. “We are very concerned about the freezing issuing of residence permits to international staff in Lebanon,” UNHCR spokesman Andre Mahecic said during a briefing in Geneva. Foreign Minister Gebran Bassil ordered the freeze last week after accusing UNHCR of hindering the return of refugees to Syria by “spreading fear”. “We do not oppose or discourage people returning, when they return based on their own decision and based on informed choice,” Mahecic said. “It is the reality that some people are returning. They are making their decision to go back,” Mahecic said. “We have also in that regard ramped up our assistance inside Syria where we can to be able to support those,” he said. “We hope that the decision of the foreign ministry will be reversed without delay,” he added. Bassil was criticized by Lebanese officials for his move against the UNHCR. Prime Minister-designate Saad Hariri slammed his “unilateral” decision. In announcing his move, Bassil said the UNHCR had discouraged refugees from returning by asking them questions about conditions they might face in Syria, including the possibility of military conscription, security problems and poor accommodation. “UNHCR does not try to discourage the refugees from returning back to Syria at all. We respect people’s decisions, the individual decisions for people to return,” said Rola Amin, spokeswoman for the agency in the Middle East, last week. Syrian refugees now account for around a quarter of the population of Lebanon - around 1 million are registered with the United Nations. The Lebanese government wants the refugees to start going home; the UN says it is not yet safe for them to return. Beirut is working with Damascus to arrange the return of thousands of refugees it says want to go back to Syria, a top Lebanese official said last month. Lebanese President Michel Aoun has been calling for Syrian refugees to return to areas of the country he has described as secure. He says this should happen before a final political solution to the seven-year-long war. A conference on Syria hosted by the European Union and co-chaired by the United Nations in April said conditions remained unsafe.
 
Bassil Says Important to Preserve FPM-Hizbullah 'Strategic' Alliance
Naharnet/June 12/18/Free Patriotic Movement chief and caretaker Foreign Minister Jebran Bassil on Tuesday called for preserving his movement's “strategic agreement” with Hizbullah. “We maybe parted ways with Hizbullah democratically in the latest elections, but we preserved our strategic agreement and what's most important is the continuation of this agreement,” Bassil said during an iftar banquet in the Jbeil town of Almat. He added: “In this country no one is submissive to anyone and no one is stronger than the other. We are all submissive to Lebanon through our national unity.”

Report: 'Hizbullah-Linked' Moguls Exploiting UAE Real-Estate Market

Associated Press/Naharnet/June 12/18/Two Lebanese businessmen sanctioned by the U.S. for allegedly helping Hizbullah "covertly purchase sophisticated electronics" for military drones have at least one property in Dubai, although the UAE opposes Iran-backed Hizbullah and has placed it on its terror list, a new report released Tuesday alleges. The report by the Washington-based Center for Advanced Defense Studies identifies the two businessmen as Kamel and Issam Amhaz. It also identifies another nearly $70 million in Dubai properties owned by two other shareholders in Amhaz's sanctioned firms. The report relies on alleged leaked property data from the city-state. The government-run Dubai Media Office said it could not comment on the report.

Sayyed briefs Aoun after STL testimony
The Daily Star/June. 12/18/BEIRUT: President Michel Aoun received MP Jamil al-Sayyed on Tuesday following Sayyed’s return from the Netherlands, where he concluded three days of testimony before the Special Tribunal for Lebanon. According to a statement from the president’s office, Sayyed, who is a former director of General Security, briefed Aoun on the progress of the tribunal, which is tasked with investigating the 2005 assassination of former Prime Minister Rafik Hariri. Sayyed previously said during his testimony that Hariri’s accommodating position toward Syria was the principal reason behind his assassination on Feb. 14, 2005. Aoun and Sayyed also discussed Lebanon’s domestic situation, especially regarding the issue of border demarcation in south Lebanon. Sayyed thanked Aoun for his interest in the Baalbeck-Hermel area, which the former said he expected will continue to improve with regards to development and security, according to the statement.

U.N. Says Respects Lebanon Sensitivities, Urges Unblocking of Residency Permits
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/June 12/18/The U.N. refugee agency on Tuesday urged Lebanon to reverse a decision to block residency permits for its international staffers following a spat over Syrians displaced by the war. The decision was announced on Friday by the office of Foreign Minister Jebran Bassil who has accused UNHCR of intimidating refugees to prevent their return to Syria. Speaking to reporters in Geneva, UNHCR spokesman Andrej Mahecic said the agency was "very concerned" by the move. "We hope the decision of the foreign ministry will be reversed without delay," he said. UNHCR spokeswoman Riwa Amin meanwhile told Lebanon's MTV that a “forcible return” of refugees would “violate the international law,” while stressing that the agency respects “Lebanon's sensitivities.” She also noted that 85 percent of regugees “want to return” but are “demanding security, stability, jobs and homes.”Bassil had on Thursday pointed the finger at the agency in a posting on Twitter. "We sent a mission that verified that the UNHCR is intimidating the displaced who wish to return voluntarily," he tweeted. UNHCR has denied the allegations but made clear it does not believe the conditions in Syria are "conducive for an assisted return" -- although a spokesman said the situation was changing and that the agency was following developments.  Prime Minister-designate Saad Hariri had immediately moved to disassociate himself from the move, with his office describing it as "unilateral" and "not representative of the Lebanese government's position."There are an estimated 1.5 million people displaced by the war in neighboring Syria in Lebanon -- a figure representing more than a quarter of its population before the conflict.

Bassil on Soleimani's Remarks: We're Not Submissive to Anyone
Naharnet/June 12/18/Free Patriotic Movement chief MP Jebran Bassil stressed Tuesday that the Strong Lebanon parliamentary bloc is “independent,” after a senior Iranian general counted it as part of Hizbullah's share in the new parliament. “We are an independent bloc that reached parliament with its own strength. We are not submissive to anyone and no one is submissive to us,” Bassil said after the bloc's weekly meeting, in an apparent response to General Qassem Soleimani's recent remarks. “The parliament only contains political weights and no one has won the majority,” Bassil added. In remarks that have sparked controversy in Lebanon, Soleimani has praised Hizbullah and its allies for making significant gains in last month's parliamentary elections, claiming that “Hizbullah has won 74 out of parliament's 128 seats.”

Report: Hariri to Meet State Heads on Sidelines of World Cup Opening in Moscow
Naharnet/June 12/18/Prime Minister-designate Saad Hariri will be flying to Russia on Thursday to participate in the 2018 World Cup opening ceremony where he is expected to hold “significant meetings” with several state heads on the sidelines of the event, media reports said Tuesday. Unnamed sources told al-Joumhouria daily that the premier is expected to meet with Russian President Vladimir Putin, Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman and other Asian and European leaders while in Moscow. “Hariri told President Michel Aoun that he will have significant meetings on the sidelines of the World Cup opening,” noting that the dates have not been specified yet, said the sources.

Geagea: LF's Govt. Share 'Not for Saudi Arabia'
Naharnet/June 12/18/Lebanese Forces leader Samir Geagea stressed Tuesday that the LF will represent itself in the new government and not the interests of Saudi Arabia. In an interview with German news agency DPA, Geagea refused to depict the friendly relation between his party and Riyadh as being the “gateway” for Saudi policies in Lebanon. “We represent ourselves in the Lebanese government and we are keen on Lebanon's interests. Our share in the government will be for the LF and not for Saudi Arabia or any other state. We are truly the kingdom's friends but our work inside Lebanon is totally something else,” Geagea added. Asked about Hizbullah central council official Sheikh Nabil Qaouq's accusations that Saudi Arabia is interfering and obstructing the government formation process for the sake of its allies, Geagea said: “It is not us who receive hundreds of million yearly (from Iran) and it is not us who are linked to certain regional axes for whom we fight in Syria and outside Syria.”

Decomposed Body Found Near Fidar Bridge
Naharnet/June 12/18/The body of a dead woman was found on Tuesday lying near al-Fidar Bridge to the south of the northern city of Jbeil, the National News Agency reported. NNA said the female, 24 years, was identified with her initials as G.A. and hails from the town of Mazboud in Mount Lebanon's Iqlim al-Kharroub region. The body was partially decomposed, said the agency. Security Forces inspected the scene and opened investigation into the incident.

Report: Bassil Escalates U.N. Refugee Staff Residency Permits Row
Naharnet/June 12/18/The Foreign Ministry has reportedly officially informed the UNHCR on Monday of caretaker Foreign Minister Jebran Bassil’s controversial decision to freeze residency permits for its staff, despite emphasis that relations with the U.N. are a jurisdiction of the prime minister, media reports said Tuesday. Ministry sources told al-Akhbar daily that “there will be no negligence. We are also considering taking stricter measures shall the United Nations refugee agency fail to change its approach regarding the Syrian refugees file in Lebanon and stop discouraging them to return home.”They stressed that “other decisions could follow in the coming days if it insists on following the same policy.”On Friday, Bassil ordered a freeze on the renewal of residency permits for the UNHCR, saying it is intimidating Syrian refugees in Lebanon from returning by asking them about compulsory military service, security conditions and whether they have a place to live. However, al-Mustaqbal Movement sources rejected in remarks to al-Joumhouria daily Bassil’s “approach with the UNHCR,” saying “it is not useful for national interest to make compulsory, uncalculated reactions that place Lebanon in a difficult situation.”
Earlier, reports said that Prime Minister-designate Saad Hariri has told Bassil that the relation with the U.N. is “part of his jurisdiction as a premier” and that he “cannot be bypassed” in this regard, after Bassil's decision sparked a storm of criticism. Official sources following up on the Syrian refugee crisis said that Bassil, in his turn, told Hariri that he will not take further measures against the U.N. refugee agency.Lebanon is home to more than a million Syrian refugees, or about a quarter of the country's population. Bassil's statement came amid reports that some 3,000 Syrians are getting ready to head back home later this month. A Foreign Ministry statement said Bassil's measure came after direct warnings by the ministry to UNHCR representative in Lebanon Mireille Girard who was summoned twice recently.

Lebanese Man Stranded for 42 Days in Ecuador Airport
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/June 12/18/A Lebanese man has been stuck in immigration purgatory at an airport in Ecuador for 42 days after losing his passport and being returned there from Spain. Nizam Hussein Shalak, 56, who does not speak Spanish, has been residing in the international terminal of the Jose Joaquin de Olmedo airport in Guayaquil, El Universo newspaper reported. "It is a case of inadmissibility because he has no documents," a foreign ministry source said. "The only legal body to issue a travel document is the Lebanese consulate in Bogota," which has not responded to requests that it do so, the source said. "We are closely following the case and are working with the interior (ministry) to get Lebanon to issue him a travel document so he can return to his country." The situation resembles that of an Iranian refugee who lived in a Paris airport from 1988 to 2006 and was portrayed in the film "The Terminal" starring Tom Hanks. Shalak visited Guayaquil two months ago and stopped on the way back to Lebanon in Lima, Peru, and Barcelona, Spain, where he was detained after losing his passport as well as his credit cards, El Universo newspaper reported. He stayed in Barcelona for 10 days and Lima for another 11 before being returned to Guayaquil, where he had to make a makeshift a bed on the seats of the terminal. "He eats with the coupons that the airline... gives him from time to time" and showers "every three or four days, when they take him to a bathroom in another part of the terminal," the newspaper said.
The foreign ministry source said that while Shalak left with a passport, he did not have one upon his return and could not pass immigration. Therefore, "he is not legally in the country."

Nadim Gemayel: Refugee Return Requires Coordination with Syrian Govt.
Naharnet/June 12/18/MP Nadim Gemayel of the Kataeb parliamentary bloc announced Monday that the return of Syrian refugees to their country requires “coordination” with the Syrian government. “The quick return of Syrian refugees to their country is a national necessity that requires us to directly coordinate with the government of the regime in Syria,” Gemayel tweeted, in a rare acknowledgment by an anti-Damascus Lebanese politician. Tiny Lebanon hosts an estimated 1.5 million people displaced by the war in neighboring Syria -- more than a quarter of its population before the conflict.
Lebanon has seen its water, electricity and waste removal infrastructure strained by the influx of Syrian refugees. Syrian refugees are a recurring topic in Lebanon's political debate. More than 350,000 people have been killed in the Syrian war and millions have been displaced since it started in 2011 with the violent repression of anti-government protests. Syria's regime has retaken more than half of the country from rebels since Russia intervened in 2015 on its behalf.

Latest LCCC Bulletin For Miscellaneous Reports And News published on June 12-13/18
Trump, Kim Meet at Historic Summit
Asharq Al-Awsat/Tuesday, 12 June/18/US President Donald Trump and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un shook hands on Tuesday at a historic summit in Singapore,
The two men clasped hands beneath the white-washed walls of an upscale hotel in neutral Singapore, before sitting down for a half-day of meetings with major ramifications for the region and the world.
The pair shook hands for several seconds, Trump reaching out to touch the North Korean leader on his right shoulder. As they sat down for their tete-a-tete, the US leader -- who had said he would know "within the first minute" if a deal would be possible -- predicted a "terrific relationship" with Kim. For his part, the North's leader made a reference to the two countries' history of war and acrimony, but noted the fact of their meeting showed they could overcome the past.
Sitting across from Trump at a small side table, Kim told the US president through a translator: "It was not easy to get here."
"The past worked as fetters on our limbs and the old prejudices and practices worked as obstacles on our way forward," he went on, his listener looking him in the eye and nodding. "But we overcame all of them and we are here today."
Trump responded: "That's true" before another handshake -- smiling this time -- and a thumbs-up from the US president. The imagery for the high-stakes meeting was undoubtedly positive and Kim Yong-hyun, professor at Dongguk University in Seoul said: "The atmosphere of the summit looks very good." "It will be hard for this meeting to agree on specific deals but it carries considerable significance as a starting point," he said. The combatants of the 1950-53 Korean War are technically still at war, as the conflict, in which millions of people died, was concluded only with a truce.
After initial exchanges lasting around 40 minutes, Trump and Kim emerged, walking side-by-side through the colonnaded hotel before entering a meeting room, where they were joined by their most senior officials. Kim was heard telling Trump through a translator: “I think the entire world is watching this moment. Many people in the world will think of this as a scene from a fantasy...science fiction movie.”
Asked by a reporter how the meeting was going, Trump said: “Very good. Very, very good. Good relationship.”Kim also sounded positive about the prospects.
“We overcame all kinds of skepticism and speculations about this summit and I believe that this is good for the peace,” he said. “I believe this is a good prelude for peace.”
Trump was joined by Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, National Security Adviser John Bolton, and John Kelly, White House Chief of Staff, for the expanded talks, while Kim’s team included former military intelligence chief Kim Yong Chol, foreign minister Ri Yong Ho and Ri Su Yong, vice chairman of the ruling Workers’ Party. As the two leaders met, Singapore navy vessels, and air force Apache helicopters patrolled, while fighter jets and an Gulfstream 550 early warning aircraft circled.
While Trump and Kim search each other’s eyes and words for signs of trust or deceit, the rest of the world will be watching, hoping that somehow these two unpredictable leaders can find a way to defuse one of the planet’s most dangerous flashpoints.
A body language expert said both men tried to project command as they met, but also displayed signs of nerves. After the meetings, the two teams met for a working lunch, where beef short ribs, sweet and sour pork and “Daegu Jormin”, or Korean braised cod, were served for the main course, according to the menu. That was to be followed by dark chocolate tarts, pastries and vanilla ice cream for dessert.
The Singapore summit is a potentially legacy-defining meeting for both men -- comparable to president Richard Nixon's 1972 visit to China, or Ronald Reagan's 1986 summit with Mikhail Gorbachev in Reykjavik.
And it is part of what Trump calls a "one-time" offer to resolve the stand-off through diplomacy.
Many agreements have been made in the past with North Korea that have later fallen apart.
On the table is the vexed question of denuclearization -- a word that means vastly different things to the two parties. It remains far from clear that Pyongyang is willing to give up its nukes -— weapons that the regime sees as its ultimate guarantee of survival.
The totalitarian regime has made rapid progress towards marrying nuclear and missile technology that would put Los Angeles, New York and Washington within striking distance of a nuclear weapon.
The United States says that is unacceptable and will be dealt with, one way or another.
For North Korea the talks are hugely significant and the image of Kim and Trump standing before the flags of both countries is an enormous step towards ending decades of international isolation.

Kim also sounded positive about the prospects.
“We overcame all kinds of skepticism and speculations about this summit and I believe that this is good for the peace,” he said. “I believe this is a good prelude for peace.”
Trump was joined by Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, National Security Adviser John Bolton, and John Kelly, White House Chief of Staff, for the expanded talks, while Kim’s team included former military intelligence chief Kim Yong Chol, foreign minister Ri Yong Ho and Ri Su Yong, vice chairman of the ruling Workers’ Party. As the two leaders met, Singapore navy vessels, and air force Apache helicopters patrolled, while fighter jets and an Gulfstream 550 early warning aircraft circled. While Trump and Kim search each other’s eyes and words for signs of trust or deceit, the rest of the world will be watching, hoping that somehow these two unpredictable leaders can find a way to defuse one of the planet’s most dangerous flashpoints. A body language expert said both men tried to project command as they met, but also displayed signs of nerves. After the meetings, the two teams met for a working lunch, where beef short ribs, sweet and sour pork and “Daegu Jormin”, or Korean braised cod, were served for the main course, according to the menu. That was to be followed by dark chocolate tarts, pastries and vanilla ice cream for dessert. The Singapore summit is a potentially legacy-defining meeting for both men -- comparable to president Richard Nixon's 1972 visit to China, or Ronald Reagan's 1986 summit with Mikhail Gorbachev in Reykjavik. And it is part of what Trump calls a "one-time" offer to resolve the stand-off through diplomacy. Many agreements have been made in the past with North Korea that have later fallen apart. On the table is the vexed question of denuclearization -- a word that means vastly different things to the two parties. It remains far from clear that Pyongyang is willing to give up its nukes -— weapons that the regime sees as its ultimate guarantee of survival. The totalitarian regime has made rapid progress towards marrying nuclear and missile technology that would put Los Angeles, New York and Washington within striking distance of a nuclear weapon. The United States says that is unacceptable and will be dealt with, one way or another. For North Korea the talks are hugely significant and the image of Kim and Trump standing before the flags of both countries is an enormous step towards ending decades of international isolation.

IAEA Welcomes Trump-Kim Joint Statement After Historic Summit

London- Asharq Al Awsat/Tuesday, 12 June, 2018/The head of the United Nation’s nuclear watchdog has welcomed US President Donald Trump's joint statement with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un. Yukiya Amano, the director general of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), said his agency "stands ready to undertake any verification activities in (North Korea) that it may be requested to conduct by the countries concerned." He noted that the Trump-Kim statement signed Tuesday in Singapore includes a North Korean commitment "towards complete denuclearization of the Korean Peninsula."Amano says the IAEA "will closely follow the negotiations to be held between the two countries to implement the outcomes" of Trump's summit with Kim. After the summit, Trump and Kim pledged to work toward complete denuclearization of the Korean peninsula while Washington committed to providing security guarantees for its old enemy. The joint statement signed at the end of their historic summit in Singapore gave few details on how either goal would be achieved but Trump fleshed out some details at a news conference. "President Trump committed to provide security guarantees to the DPRK and Chairman Kim Jong Un reaffirmed his firm and unwavering commitment to complete denuclearization of the Korean Peninsula," said the statement. DPRK is the Democratic People's Republic of Korea, the formal name of North Korea. Earlier on Monday, UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres stressed the importance of setting peace and verifiable denuclearization of the Korean peninsula as the clear goals of the Singapore summit. The UN chief said experts from the IAEA could help verify that North Korea has indeed scrapped its nuclear program, if the parties request their assistance. "The world is closely watching what will take place in Singapore in a few hours' time," Guterres told reporters hours ahead of the historic meeting. "The two leaders are seeking to break out of the dangerous cycle that created so much concern last year." "Peace and verifiable denuclearization must remain the clear and shared goal," he added. Donald Trump and Kim Jong Un discussed on Tuesday demands for Pyongyang to scrap its missile and nuclear programs during the meeting, the first ever between a sitting US president and a North Korean leader. Guterres said: "the road ahead will require cooperation, compromise and a common cause". "There will be inevitable ups and downs, moments of disagreement and tough negotiations." The UN chief called for donor contributions to a humanitarian appeal of $111 million to help six million North Koreans in need of aid and stressed the importance of improving respect for human rights in the country. After North Korea last month invited foreign journalists to witness the closure of its Pungyye-ri nuclear test site, Guterres complained that international experts should have been there.

Arrest of Gunman Ends Hostage Siege in Central Paris
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/June 12/18/A gunman who took two people hostage in central Paris on Tuesday has been arrested and his victims freed "safe and sound", police in the French capital said. "Two hostages. including one who had petrol poured on them," have been freed police said. The standoff began around 4:00 pm (1400 GMT), with BFM television reporting that the man had entered the offices of a start-up company on the Rue des Petites Ecuries, a gritty area of the bustling 10th arrondissement. At least one other man was lightly injured while fighting with the hostage-taker and escaping before police arrived on the scene. The motive for the attack was not clear but incident did not appear to be terrorism-related."Based on our initial investigations it could be a mentally unstable person whose motivations are still unclear," another source said. France has been on high alert after a series of jihadist attacks in the past three years, most recently a Saturday night knife attack in Paris last month in which one person was killed.

Netanyahu Offers Iran Solutions for Water Crisis
London, Tel Aviv- Asharq Al Awsat/Tuesday, 12 June, 2018/Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu released a video Sunday personally addressing the Iranian people by announcing the launch of a Persian-language website to address "the severe water shortage that threatens millions of lives."Netanyahu said he was ready to personally be responsible for marketing a new Israeli initiative called "Life for the Iranian People," aimed at helping Iranians in the water field. He appeared in a video filmed in his office in West Jerusalem for this purpose, and he began with a scene in which he poured a glass of water for himself from a glass container he said was produced by desalination plants. He then spoke about the severe crisis faced by Iranians as a result of water shortages. “Millions of Iranian children are suffering from mismanagement and incompetence,” he stated. He noted that "Iran's meteorological organization says that nearly 96 percent of Iran suffers from some level of drought," and that Iran’s Environmental Minister had warned that "50 million Iranians could be forced to leave their homes due to environmental problems." Israel’s prime minister openly boasted that his country developed “cutting-edge technologies” in the field, and it “recycles nearly 90 percent of its wastewater.”The promoted website is actually a section at the official site of the Israeli Foreign Ministry, which indeed features some articles on water management and agriculture in Farsi. Notably, the web page eagerly encourages Iranians to read about the new Israeli water management and follow the news about it on Telegram – an instant messaging service that was actually banned in Iran as early as a month ago. The video was posted on a special site set up by the Israeli government in Persian-language as part of a photo-management report showing how Israel can help Iranians in water reuse. Notably, Iran has been experiencing tension in several areas because of a sharp drop in water supply following a drought that has been hitting the country for 10 years now. Experts also point fingers at poor water management in the country and the widening of the environmental crisis. In response to Netanyahu’s video, Iranian Foreign Ministry Spokesman Bahram Qasemi said that Netanyahu's comments do not deserve even an answer. “I don't know why we should answer the claims made by this showman,' Qasemi said. “Of course, I think since he has not managed to change the Europeans' views on the Iran Deal during his tour of the Continent, now he is embarking on such a deceitful measure against Iran,” he said. “Netanyahu should better stop going on with his crimes and child killings. He does not need to be concerned about drought in Iran,” Qasemi stressed.

Israeli Police Question Netanyahu for Third Time in Corruption Probe
Asharq Al-Awsat/Tuesday, 12 June, 2018/Israeli police interrogated on Tuesday Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu for the third time over corruption charges linked to the country’s largest telecommunication company. Police declined immediate comment, but Israel Radio said Netanyahu was being questioned over allegations he awarded regulatory favors to Bezeq Telecom Israel in return for favorable coverage on a news site the company’s owner controls. Netanyahu, who has been questioned twice before in the so-called Case 4000, and Bezeq have denied wrongdoing. A vehicle carrying police officers pulled up at the entrance of the prime minister's official residence, where a clutch of protesters called for Netanyahu to resign over the investigations. In February, police recommended Netanyahu be charged with bribery in two other cases. Israel's attorney general is still weighing whether to indict him. Two Netanyahu confidants have been arrested on suspicion of promoting regulation worth hundreds of millions of dollars to Bezeq. In return, Bezeq's subsidiary news site, Walla, allegedly provided positive Netanyahu coverage.  The confidants have turned state witnesses. In the first investigation, known as Case 1000, Netanyahu is suspected of bribery over gifts from wealthy businessmen, which police say were worth nearly $300,000. The other, Case 2000, involves an alleged plot to win positive coverage in Israel’s biggest newspaper by offering to take measures to curtail the circulation of a rival daily. In both those cases, lawyers for Netanyahu said he has committed no crimes. The premier has dismissed the accusations as a media witch hunt. Despite the probes, the right-wing leader's popularity has risen in the past few weeks, a reflection, commentators said, of his tough security policies, US withdrawal from the Iran nuclear deal he opposes, and the opening of the American Embassy in contested Jerusalem, a move Netanyahu has long advocated. The surveys predicted that Netanyahu's Likud party, which heads a coalition largely comprised of right-wing and religious factions, would add up to four seats to the 30 it already holds in the 120-member parliament if an election were held now. Israel is due to hold its next national ballot no later than November 2019.

Israeli Police Question Netanyahu for Third Time in Corruption Probe
Asharq Al-Awsat/Tuesday, 12 June, 2018/Israeli police interrogated on Tuesday Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu for the third time over corruption charges linked to the country’s largest telecommunication company. Police declined immediate comment, but Israel Radio said Netanyahu was being questioned over allegations he awarded regulatory favors to Bezeq Telecom Israel in return for favorable coverage on a news site the company’s owner controls. Netanyahu, who has been questioned twice before in the so-called Case 4000, and Bezeq have denied wrongdoing. A vehicle carrying police officers pulled up at the entrance of the prime minister's official residence, where a clutch of protesters called for Netanyahu to resign over the investigations. In February, police recommended Netanyahu be charged with bribery in two other cases. Israel's attorney general is still weighing whether to indict him. Two Netanyahu confidants have been arrested on suspicion of promoting regulation worth hundreds of millions of dollars to Bezeq. In return, Bezeq's subsidiary news site, Walla, allegedly provided positive Netanyahu coverage. The confidants have turned state witnesses. In the first investigation, known as Case 1000, Netanyahu is suspected of bribery over gifts from wealthy businessmen, which police say were worth nearly $300,000. The other, Case 2000, involves an alleged plot to win positive coverage in Israel’s biggest newspaper by offering to take measures to curtail the circulation of a rival daily. In both those cases, lawyers for Netanyahu said he has committed no crimes. The premier has dismissed the accusations as a media witch hunt. Despite the probes, the right-wing leader's popularity has risen in the past few weeks, a reflection, commentators said, of his tough security policies, US withdrawal from the Iran nuclear deal he opposes, and the opening of the American Embassy in contested Jerusalem, a move Netanyahu has long advocated. The surveys predicted that Netanyahu's Likud party, which heads a coalition largely comprised of right-wing and religious factions, would add up to four seats to the 30 it already holds in the 120-member parliament if an election were held now. Israel is due to hold its next national ballot no later than November 2019.

Rouhani tells Macron: Impossible to stay in nuclear deal unless Iran benefits
Reuters/Tuesday, 12 June 2018/Iranian President Hassan Rouhani warned world powers on Tuesday that it was impossible for Tehran to stay in the nuclear deal if it cannot benefit from the accord after the US withdrawal. In a call with French President Emmanuel Macron, Rouhani said he was satisfied with Europe’s stance, especially French efforts to salvage the 2015 deal, but that “such statements should be combined with actions and tangible measures”. “If Iran cannot benefit from the (nuclear) deal, then it’s practically impossible to stay in the accord,” Rouhani was quoted by state news agency IRNA as saying in a phone call with the French president. The pact between Iran and world powers lifted international sanctions on Tehran. In return, Iran scaled back its nuclear activities, increasing the time it would need to produce an atom bomb if it chose to do so, a goal it denies having. Since President Donald Trump withdrew the United States in May, calling the accord flawed, European signatories - France, Britain and Germany - have been scrambling to ensure Iran retains enough economic benefits to persuade it not to pull out. Macron’s office said he had told Rouhani in the same telephone call that France remained committed to the nuclear deal but Tehran needed to fully comply with its commitments. “The President of the Republic recalled the will of France, Britain, Germany, Russia and China, to continue to implement the Vienna agreement in all its dimensions,” Macron’s office said. “The president informed President Rouhani of the progress in the work being done on our side. He hoped that Iran, for its part, will fulfill its obligations without any ambiguity.”Macron’s office confirmed a previously agreed ministerial meeting between all the remaining signatories of the deal, the European powers, China and Russia, would be held in the coming weeks in Vienna. French diplomatic sources said the meeting was likely to take place during the week of June 25.
 
Iraq’s Sadr and Amiri announce political alliance
Reuters, Baghdad/Tuesday, 12 June 2018/Nationalist cleric Muqtada al-Sadr and Iranian-backed militia chief Hadi al-Amiri, who won first and second place respectively in Iraq’s May parliamentary election, announced on Tuesday an alliance between their political blocs.
The announcement came at a joint press conference in the Shiite holy city of Najaf, state television said. Earlier in the day, Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi said he opposed any repeat of the May 12 parliamentary election, and warned that anyone who tried to sabotage the political process would be punished, after allegations of electoral fraud raised tensions.
 
Haider al-Abadi opposes repeat of Iraq elections
Reuters/Tuesday, 12 June 2018/Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi said on Tuesday he opposed any repeat of the May 12 parliamentary election, and warned that anyone who tried to sabotage the political process would be punished, after allegations of electoral fraud raised tensions. Parliament has demanded a nationwide recount of votes, drawing calls for the election to be re-run. Abadi said only the Supreme Federal Court could decide whether to re-run the vote, which was won by Shiite cleric Moqtada al-Sadr’s bloc. “The matter is exclusively in the hands of the judiciary, not politicians. The government and parliament don’t have the power to cancel the election,” Abadi told a news conference. On Monday, Sadr urged Iraqis to unite rather than squabble over a possible re-run of the election, in a message apparently meant to lower the political temperature after a ballot box storage depot caught fire. Abadi called the fire a deliberate act and said the attorney general would bring charges against those who are trying to undermine the political process. An Iraqi court ordered the arrest of four people accused of setting fire to the storage site, the judiciary said. Three of them were policemen and one an employee of the Independent High Elections Commission. Abadi said a preliminary report had provided evidence of gasoline at multiple areas inside the storage site. It also showed that security cameras had been disabled and no locks had been broken, implying it was carried out by someone with access to the storage site. Iraqi authorities said the ballot boxes had been rescued but the fire has fueled fears of violence. Abadi thanked Sadr for a disarmament initiative he floated after a weapons cache at his Baghdad stronghold of Sadr City exploded, killing 18 people, and said he hoped the cleric would stick to it. “I welcome Sayed Moqtada’s announcement that his followers commit to not having weapons outside the framework of the state. We consider this good,” he said, adding that those responsible for the explosion would be brought to justice. “What happened in Sadr City is very regrettable, it is a crime. Those responsible will receive their just punishment.”
 
Germany Arrests Suspected Iraqi ISIS Member
Asharq Al-Awsat/Tuesday, 12 June, 2018/German authorities have arrested an 18-year-old Iraqi man on suspicion of being an ISIS member. Federal prosecutors said Aqram A., whose full name was withheld on privacy grounds, was preliminary detained Wednesday in the southwestern Rhine-Neckar district. Prosecutors said that the man is suspected of joining ISIS in 2014 in the Iraqi city of Mosul where he completed military training for approximately four weeks. During the ensuing period, he worked as a guard and prepared fighting positions for the extremist group. In the summer of 2015, the suspect took part in fighting near the Iraqi town Beiji. He allegedly left Iraq in late 2015 and entered Germany in February 2016. Four Iraqis were arrested in Germany on similar charges last week. German police have been on high alert over potential militant attacks, particularly since December 2016 when a man hijacked a truck and ploughed into shoppers at a Christmas market in Berlin, killing 12 people. The attacker was shot dead by police in Milan four days later, and the rampage was claimed by ISIS. The terrorist group claimed responsibility for a number of other attacks in 2016.

US Ambassador to Israel Called Back to Washington for the 'Deal of the Century'

Tel Aviv- Asharq Al Awsat/Tuesday, 12 June, 2018/The US administration has called back its Ambassador to Israel David Friedman for urgent negotiations in the White House on the forthcoming Middle East peace plan, also known as "deal of the century."Friedman had been set to attend the American Jewish Congress Global Forum in Jerusalem on Sunday, however, he canceled his attendance at the last minute and left a recorded greeting for the conference delegates, saying, he is in Washington in consultations on the administration’s evolving peace plan asking them to "wish us luck."He apologized to the attendees: "I’m sorry I cannot be with you this evening at the conference. By the time you see this greeting, I’ll be in Washington."The US Embassy in the West Jerusalem confirmed that Friedman had returned to the United States, which led to increased expectations about the date of the announcement of the deal.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu also addressed the conflict with the Palestinians, saying that the reason for the impasse in peace negotiations was the consistent Palestinian rejection of the idea of a Jewish state. "The reason we don’t have peace is not because of the absence of a Palestinian state,” indicated Netanyahu. "That’s why a hundred years ago, the rejectionist elements in Palestinian society rejected the Balfour Declaration," he added. "If President Abbas wants to make peace," he warned, "recognize the Jewish state for God’s sake! That will bring peace once and for all." He called on Palestinians to recognize the Jewish state, invest in peace, and stop paying the terrorists' salaries.

Egypt: 4 Terrorists Killed in Arish Clashes
Cairo - Asharq Al-Awsat/Tuesday, 12 June, 2018/Four terrorists were killed in clashes with security forces in Arish city in northern Sinai on Monday as Egyptian President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi stressed the importance of exerted efforts to confront extremism. The four terrorists were killed in an exchange of gunfire with policemen, a security source said, adding that the extremists had used a building that was under construction as a hideout. For the past several years, the Egyptian army has been conducting operations in the Sinai Peninsula to wipe out extremists. In mid-February, the armed forces and the police launched a major military campaign to restore security in the province. Sisi said Monday that Al-Azhar and the Ministry of Awqaf are working on correcting misconceptions regarding Islam. He said that Egypt has been facing major challenges in the past years, but the people had a strong will to confront them. “They were united in facing the forces of evil and darkness that attempted to destroy their homeland.” The Egyptians resisted attempts to stir chaos and faced all threats made against the country’s security, said Sisi. The people shed their blood for the sake of the country and in defense of its stability, he stated, adding that they patiently endured tough economic conditions and went ahead with the reforms in order to establish a modern state and an advanced society. In his speech, Sisi tackled the resignation of PM Sherif Ismail’s cabinet, saying that the change of governments is necessary to give chances to one another. During performing rituals of Laylat al-Qadr, Sisi honored ten Quran memorizers who have won the world competition for memorizing and explaining the Quran.

PM-Designate Thanks Saudi Arabia, Kuwait and UAE for Supporting Jordan
Amman, Cairo – Mohammed al-Daameh and Sawsan Abou Hussein/Asharq Al-Awsat/Tuesday, 12 June, 2018/Jordan’s Prime Minister-designate Omar al-Razzaz thanked on Monday Saudi Arabia, Kuwait and the United Arab Emirate for the aid package they pledged to Amman to help it overcome economic challenges. Following a meeting with the general secretaries of political parties, Razzaz told reporters that Jordan highly appreciated the three Gulf States for providing $2.5 billion to help it address its economic crisis. “Our brothers in Saudi Arabia, Kuwait and the UAE took the initiative to stand with us during these difficult circumstances,” Razzaz said. On Sunday, a Saudi-hosted summit held in the holy city of Makkah pledged $2.5 billion in aid to help Jordan overcome its economic crisis. The aid will be provided through a deposit at the Jordanian Central Bank, guarantees for the World Bank, annual support for the Jordanian government’s budget over the next five years and financing from development funds for projects in the Kingdom. This came as the country witnessed over the past week protests against a controversial income tax bill, which Razzaz pledged to withdraw as soon as his new government takes the oath of office. He met with the secretaries of Jordan’s political parties within the framework of his consultations to discuss the formation of his cabinet. He said during the meeting that the previous government had miscalculated the move to rush to send the draft income tax law to the parliament, stressing that he also bears responsibility as a government member. After listening to the political party chiefs, Razzaz stressed that a genuine and meaningful national dialogue should be initiated, adding that the fight against corruption was linked to economic and political reform. Meanwhile, the Jordanian House of Representatives highly valued the outcome of the emergency summit held in Makkah. In a statement issued on Monday, the parliament said that the support provided by “our brotherly countries of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, UAE and Kuwait echoes the deeply rooted strategic relationship between the four countries.”

7 Slightly Injured as Paris Suburban Train Overturns
Asharq Al-Awsat/Tuesday, 12 June, 2018/Seven people have been slightly injured in a rare derailment of a suburban RER train near Paris caused by a large amount of overnight rainfall in the region, France's transport minister, Elisabeth Borne, said Tuesday. The minister told Franceinfo radio that three passenger cars of a RER B train came to rest on their side because of a landslide in Courcelle-sur-Yvette, southwest of Paris.“Fortunately, there are only seven slightly injured, who are being treated," Borne said. All passengers have been safely evacuated. Catherine Guillouard, president of the public transport company RATP, said train traffic will be disrupted on the line for an undetermined period of time. Photos on the social media show water flowing down a hole under the rails. A section of highway west of Paris has also been closed due to water on the road. Several departments in the Paris region have been placed on an orange alert for heavy rains and flooding, as storms battered much of France over the past days.

Air Strike Kills 10 Civilians in Northeast Syria
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/June 12/18/An air raid on a village in northeast Syria held by the Islamic State jihadist group killed at least 10 civilians including three children on Tuesday, a Britain-based monitor said. The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said the strikes on Tal al-Shair in the northeastern province of Hasakeh were carried out by the U.S.-led coalition fighting IS in Syria and neighboring Iraq since 2014. The coalition's press office told AFP it was aware of the allegations but did not have records of carrying out strikes in the area. It is the latest in a series of raids on the area that have reportedly caused civilian casualties in past weeks. Tal al-Shair lies in a small pocket still held by IS fighters near the Iraqi border in the south of Hasakeh, where a Kurdish-Arab alliance backed by the coalition has been battling the jihadists in recent days.According to the Observatory, a coalition air strike last week killed 11 civilians in the same IS-held area, and another 12 lost their lives in coalition raids on June 1. The coalition told AFP it was carrying out an investigation into the June 1 allegation. Earlier this month, it admitted to nine more civilians deaths, bringing to 892 the total number of civilians it acknowledges to have killed since it intervened in Iraq and Syria. Monitors like the Observatory and Airwars say the toll is much higher. The Observatory, which relies on sources inside Syria, says it determines whose planes carried out strikes according to type, location, flight patterns and munitions involved. IS has lost most of the cross-border caliphate it declared in 2014. In Syria it was pushed back by separate offensives -- one by Russia-backed regime troops and another by the U.S.-backed Syrian Democratic Forces alliance. But the jihadists still hold slithers of eastern Syria and have a presence in the vast Badiya desert running from the center of the country to the border with Iraq. More than 350,000 people have been killed in Syria's war since it started in 2011 with a brutal crackdown on anti-government protests. It has since spiraled into a complex conflict involving world powers and foreign jihadists.

Libya Strongman Advances in Battle to Take Eastern City
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/June 12/18/Forces loyal to Libyan strongman Khalifa Haftar said Tuesday they are advancing rapidly on the eastern city of Derna, despite troops being hit by suicide attacks. Haftar has vowed to "liberate" Derna, an Islamist stronghold that is home to more than 120,000 people and the only eastern city outside of his control. But as his self-styled Libyan National Army continued its offensive on Tuesday, two explosions were heard as suicide bombers hit forces in the southern Shiha district. Without giving a toll for the attack, LNA spokesman Khalifa al-Abidi said civilians were among the casualties as the roof of a family home collapsed. On Monday night, he said, another suicide attack killed two LNA fighters and wounded three. The LNA was "advancing steadily to liberate a very small remaining pocket before liberating the whole of Derna," he added. Abidi said "terrorists" were "resorting to suicide attacks after they failed to tackle" the LNA conventionally. Derna is held by a ragtag alliance of Islamist and jihadist militias, including groups close to al-Qaida, hostile to both Haftar and the Islamic State group. The city is located more than 1,000 kilometers (600 miles) east of the capital Tripoli and around 300 kilometers east of second city Benghazi.
Brink of 'humanitarian catastrophe' -
Haftar has struggled to succeed in the fight against insurgents, according to Federica Saini Fasanotti from the Brookings Institution in Washington. "I am not sure that this operation will bring a quick victory for him in military terms. In social terms it is already a disaster," she said. Since the start of the offensive on May 7, residents have faced food and medicine shortages, as well as cuts to electricity, water and phone lines. Abdessalam al-Hassi, leading operations in Derna, said supplies were being dispatched to "liberated zones."An LNA victory in the city was "only a question of time", Hassi said. The Red Cross said it has sent aid to 6,000 people in the neighborhood of Bab Tobruk, as well as to thousands of others who have fled the city to seek refuge in the surrounding areas. Amnesty International has called on all sides to let relief into the city and allow civilians to leave "without fear of arbitrary detention, harassment, intimidation and unlawful killings." "We are receiving horrifying reports from Derna, where a prolonged siege and heavy fighting have left the city on the brink of a humanitarian catastrophe," said Heba Morayef, the organization's Middle East and North Africa director. Haftar joined rival Libyan leaders last month in Paris, where they agreed to prepare for polls in December. For Saini Fasanotti, the LNA chief would do better to sideline his military ambitions. "I think that he should start to focus on a political campaign for the elections," she said. Haftar supports an administration based in the east, which opposes the internationally recognized government in Tripoli. The strongman's critics accuse him of wanting to establish a military dictatorship and say he is supported by foreign forces from Egypt, the United Arab Emirates and France.

Yemen President in Rare Visit to Estranged UAE Ally
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/June 12/18/Yemen's president is to hold talks in Abu Dhabi on Tuesday as he attempts to repair relations with the United Arab Emirates, which has increasingly sidelined him in its three-year military intervention. President Abedrabbo Mansour Hadi is making the rare visit on the advice of King Salman and Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman of Saudi Arabia, where he lives in exile, Yemen's government-run Saba news agency reported. Saudi Arabia and the UAE sent troops to Yemen in 2015 with the stated goal of restoring Hadi to power after he fled the country as Huthi Shiite rebels overran most of the country. But Hadi's close relations with the Muslim Brotherood-dominated Islah party have infuriated Abu Dhabi, which has swung its support behind secessionists who want to restore the pre-1990 independence of south Yemen. With UAE backing, in January the secessionists overran the main southern city of Aden where Hadi's government has its headquarters. UAE forces and their allies have also occupied several other key ports and islands, including the strategic Arabian Sea archipelago of Socotra, where Saudi Arabia too deployed troops last month as part of a deal to appease Hadi's government. The rift between Hadi and Abu Dhabi had largely overshadowed the war gainst the Huthi rebels who still control the capital Sanaa and much of the north. But last month UAE troops launched a joint offensive with Hadi's forces and their Saudi allies against the rebel-held Red Sea port of Hodeida. The city, which has a population of some 600,000, is the entry point for 70 percent of Yemen's imports, the vast of majority of them desperately needed food, and there has been mounting UN and Western pressure for a halt to the potentially bloody assault.

Anti-Rebel Forces Prepare for Yemen Port Attack despite U.N. Alarm
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/June 12/18/Pro-government forces fighting Yemen's Huthi rebels are sending reinforcements towards the port of Hodeida, military sources said Tuesday, amid U.N. warnings against a high-stakes battle for the key aid gateway. U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said his envoy Martin Griffiths has been locked in "intense negotiations" with the Iran-backed Huthis, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates to find a "way to avoid the military confrontation in Hodeida." During a meeting with Yemeni Foreign Minister Khaled Alyemany, Guterres stressed that "everyone should redouble efforts to find a political solution and avoid a fierce, bloody battle for Hodeida," U.N. spokesman Stephane Dujarric said. The city is home to 600,000 people and is the entry point for 70 percent of Yemen's imports, including vital aid supplies for civilians in the conflict-wracked country. Loyalist Yemeni military sources said the UAE-backed pro-government forces were dispatching reinforcements towards the Red Sea port. Anti-rebel forces made use of a break in fighting from Monday to send troops and equipment towards the front line, currently around 40 kilometres south of Hodeida, the sources said.
The countdown to take the port has started, Emirati newspaper The National declared on Tuesday as it warned "all signs... pointed to an imminent offensive." The pro-government Yemeni forces are a mix of local fighters, those loyal to President Abedrabbo Mansour Hadi, and supporters of the ex-head of state, Ali Abdullah Saleh, who was killed in December by his former Huthi allies. They are backed on the ground by the UAE, while Saudi Arabia has been leading a campaign of air strikes. The Yemeni president was due to make a rare visit on Tuesday from Saudi Arabia, where he lives in exile, to the UAE for talks in Abu Dhabi.
'Bloody, prolonged' battle
The anti-rebel forces are determined to drive the Huthis from Hodeida, analysts say, having failed to score any major military victories since taking five southern provinces and the city of Aden in 2015. In a sign of growing international concern over Hodeida, the U.N. Security Council met behind closed doors on Monday after Britain told aid agencies on the ground it had received a warning from the UAE of an attack. The United Nations pulled all of its international staff out of Hodeida early Monday morning. U.N. envoy Griffiths briefed the Security Council by video conference from Amman, and according to diplomats has revived a year-old plan to turn over Hodeida port to a neutral party. U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said he urged Emirati leaders to work with the U.N., making clear Washington's aims "to address their security concerns while preserving the free flow of humanitarian aid" and imports. But Pompeo fell short of warning the coalition against launching an all-out offensive and the Huthis consider any assault on Hodeida would come with Washington's authorization. The International Crisis Group said a Hodeida battle would be "bloody, prolonged and leave millions of Yemenis without food, fuel and other vital supplies."  The organization urged the U.S. not to approve an attack on the port city and called on Washington to "press the UAE to halt the movement of men under its control" and instead press on with U.N. negotiations. Anticipating the battle for Hodeida, prominent rebel Mohammed Ali al-Huthi declared his fighters would "defeat" the advance. Around 200 Huthis and 30 anti-rebel fighters have been killed south of the port city in recent days, according to military and medical sources. The rebels succeeded in retaking the village of al-Jah over the weekend, only to be driven out, military sources said. "It's an attempt to delay the battle for Hodeida," said Ahmed Ghilane, a fighter loyal to former president Saleh. After completing preparations for the Hodeida offensive, he said forces were "waiting for the green light."

Casualties as Twin Suicide Attack Hits Eastern Libya

Agence France Presse/Naharnet/June 12/18/Two suicide bombers on Tuesday hit forces loyal to Libyan strongman Khalifa Haftar who is leading an offensive against jihadists in an eastern town, a spokesman for his forces said. The explosions were heard across Derna as the bombers hit the Chiha district in the south of the town, spokesman Khalifa al-Abidi said. Abidi did not give a toll for the attacks but said civilians were among the casualties as the roof of a family home collapsed. On Monday night, another suicide attack killed two fighters of Haftar's Libyan National Army and wounded three, the spokesman said. Over the past month, the self-styled LNA has been engaged in an offensive to take Derna, the only eastern town outside Haftar's control. Derna is held by a ragtag alliance of Islamist and jihadist militias, including groups close to Al-Qaeda, hostile to both Haftar and the Islamic State group. The coastal town is located more than 1,000 kilometers (600 miles) east of the capital Tripoli and around 300 kilometers east of second city Benghazi. Abidi said the LNA is "advancing steadily to liberate a very small remaining pocket before liberating the whole of Derna."He said "terrorists" were "resorting to suicide attacks after they failed to tackle" the LNA conventionally. Haftar supports an administration based in the east which opposes the internationally recognized government in Tripoli. The strongman's critics claim he wants to establish a military dictatorship.

Israel Police Evict Wildcat Settlers as Deadline Looms
Israeli police began evicting settlers from homes in a West Bank outpost on Tuesday ahead of a court deadline to leave structures partially built on Palestinian land, an AFP correspondent reported.
Young boys in tears were followed by a young woman holding a baby, as they were escorted out of their home in the Netiv Haavot neighbourhood of Elazar settlement, south of Jerusalem. They left without any resort to physical contact by the unarmed police. In February, Israel's Supreme Court gave the settlers until June 15 to vacate 15 homes found to have been built partly on private Palestinian land. An estimated 2,000 people, most of them young activists, had travelled to the outpost to support the settlers and protest their eviction. Large Israeli flags were flying on some of the rooftops, as well as signs pledging to return to the site. After morning prayers, men sang and danced in a show of faith outside the homes to be razed. Police had tried to prevent supporters from going inside but videos published on social media showed activists joining residents in several of the homes.
- 'Peaceful protest' -One resident, Aviad Amitai, said that Tuesday marked the start of a three-day process, with police clearing people from the houses subject to the court order before demolishing them. "We have a peaceful protest, we are law-abiding people, we are not going to show any violence here," Amitai told AFP. Police spokesman Micky Rosenfeld said that while residents did not want the event to be violent, "we’ve seen in previous evacuations police officers being injured as a result of stones or violent incidents."To keep away people intent on violence, police had set up roadblocks in the area, denying access to 10 people so far, he said. Police deployed 500 officers to secure the location and "continue to evacuate the area, step by step". Rosenfeld said eviction of the homes was expected to take "at least several hours, probably the whole day."Hananel Dorni, chairman of settler group the Yesha council, said the court's decision to demolish the homes was "unwarranted".Agriculture Minister Uri Ariel, himself a settler, said the discussions leading up to the court's decision were like those in Sodom and Gomorrah, ancient cities that according to the Bible were demolished by God for their sinfulness. Ariel tweeted from Netiv Haavot that he would "not relent" before settling "all of the land of Israel." The right-wing government of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu draws support from the settlement movement and has settlers in top cabinet posts. It has approved a plan to build 350 homes at new plots in Netiv Haavot. The plan also reportedly includes some 60 million shekels ($17 million, 14 million euros) in compensation for the settlers leaving the homes to be demolished and provision for temporary housing for them until construction is complete. All Israeli settlements are viewed as illegal under international law, but Israel differentiates between those it has approved and those it has not. Peace Now, an Israeli NGO, said the Palestinian owners of the land to be vacated have been seeking to have their property restored since the settlers arrived there in 2001. Israel occupied the West Bank in the Six-Day War of 1967. Settlements there are seen as major stumbling blocks to a peace deal since they are built on land the Palestinian wants for their future state.

Statement by Canada’s Foreign Minister following United States-North Korea summit
June 12, 2018 - Ottawa, Ontario - Global Affairs Canada
The Honourable Chrystia Freeland, Minister of Foreign Affairs, today issued the following statement:
“Canada has always believed a diplomatic solution to the North Korean nuclear issue is both essential and possible. We welcome the dialogue between the leaders of the United States and North Korea that took place today in Singapore. This meeting was an important step toward advancing peace and stability on the Korean Peninsula.
“As G7 leaders recognized at their summit in Canada last week, the situation on the Korean Peninsula is not just a regional issue, but a question of international peace and security. We note North Korea’s reaffirmation of its commitment to denuclearization made in the Panmunjom Declaration of April 27, 2018, and support further dialogue toward the complete, verifiable and irreversible dismantlement of North Korea’s weapons of mass destruction and ballistic missile programs. The global sanctions regime imposed against North Korea in support of the rules-based international order must remain in place until Pyongyang changes course. This is North Korea’s only viable option for a brighter future within the international community.
“By participating in this historic meeting, North Korea has demonstrated its willingness to discuss denuclearization. We look forward to seeing North Korea follow through on this commitment with concrete actions and to move decisively toward a more positive future in the interest of the people of both North Korea and South Korea.”
 
Latest LCCC Bulletin analysis & editorials from miscellaneous sources published on June 12-13/18
My School's Imam: "We Love Western Anti-West Theories"
Majid Rafizadeh/Gatestone Institute/June 12/2018
https://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/12390/anti-west-imam
The purpose of brainwashing their students with inciting anger and hatred clearly seems to be to instill in them the notion that they are being victimized by the West.
Some members of the so-called "victim" community, such as Islamist leaders, take advantage of this victimhood status. They use it as a shield and then become the victimizers by crushing people in their own countries.
Such ideas and values prevent ordinary people and scholars from focusing on the crimes against humanity that Islamist leaders of state and non-state entities commit.
The accommodation of Muslim extremists by leaders in the West not only helps them recruit more people to target Westerners, incite anti-Western, anti-Christian, and anti-Semitic sentiments, but more importantly, it tramples the millions of ordinary Muslims who seek to promote in their homelands values such as the institutions of democracy, freedom of speech, separation of religion and state, the independence of education and the judiciary, and equal justice under the law.
my high school in Syria, which was directed by the Iranian regime through its embassy staff in Damascus (Iran has several schools in Syria and sends teachers and imams there), every student was forced to attend daily prayer at noon. We were commanded to stand behind an extremist clergyman, mimic his actions, and recite the prayer. After the prayer, we had no choice but to listen to the preaching of a fundamentalist imam who was most likely employed by the regime to advance their ideological and political interests.
me of the words preached by this radical cleric stuck with me, especially his sharp focus on how to capitalize on some, but not all, theories that originated in the West. We could utilize these theories, he said, to advance Islamist values. For example, one of the concepts, he was adamant that we learn about was "Orientalism", is a concept developed by Edward Said, a Palestinian-American who was born in 1935 in Palestine, when it was still under the British mandate.
The theory focuses on the notion that there is a fundamental flaw in the Western world, because it views the East, specifically the Muslim world and the Middle East, through a prism of superiority.
In a short time, this concept gained significant popularity in the Western academic world, and consequently it infiltrated the media and political landscapes. Inevitably it shaped and influenced public thought.
But why would an Islamist leader applaud such ideas? Why are they teaching them extensively in their madrassas, schools and universities? From the perspective of radical Muslims, such ideas automatically create two categories: the "victims", "innocents", "oppressed" and "martyrs" versus the "oppressor" or "tyrant". In other words, the whole Muslim world is given the status of victimhood, while all Westerners are supposedly tyrants.
The purpose of brainwashing their students with inciting anger and hatred clearly seems to be to instill in them the notion that they are being victimized by the West.
This is probably one of the reasons that the well-known historian Bernard Lewis, characterized the thesis of Orientalism as anti-Western -- or, as my school's imam put it, "We Love Western Anti-West Theories".
Unfortunately, such teachings help the radical Muslims and Islamist rulers to exploit an already tense situation, and to justify their terrorist attacks against the West as acts of heroism instead of atrocities.
In addition, such simplistic views that portray every Muslim as a victim harm Westerners by preventing them from acquiring the truth about the complexities and intricacies of the Muslim world.
Even more fundamentally, these views inflict incalculable harm on the lives of the ordinary people in the Muslim world, who call it: Opposite Orientalism.
Put simply, some members of the so-called "victim" community, such as the Islamist leaders, take advantage of this victimhood status. They use it as a shield and then become the victimizers by crushing people in their own countries.
Using this status as their reason to act in violent and controlling ways, they suppress domestic oppositions and Muslim dissidents who might not agree with them.
What helps these Islamist leaders even more is another idea that began in Western academic circles, and then infiltrated the media and political spectrum. If you oppose the idea of Orientalism -- meaning if you criticize any member of the Muslim world or stand with the West for any reason -- then you will be regarded by them as "uneducated", "racist", unsophisticated, or even an imperialist. If, on the other hand, you would like to be viewed by your fellow academics and self-righteous media pundits as "educated" and be respected in the mainstream social, academic and political arenas, you must refrain from criticizing the Muslim world, and instead ratchet up your criticism against the West.
Such ideas and values prevent ordinary people and scholars from focusing on the crimes against humanity that Islamist leaders of state and non-state entities commit. Take a look at the grinding human rights violations that the Islamist state of Iran commits against its own people. The ruling mullahs of Iran have been given immunity by the international community and their unspeakable violence and lawlessness has received little attention.
While enjoying the status of victimhood, Iran's mullahs have massacred nearly 30,000 political prisoners, and yet the International Criminal Court in Hague as well as other powerful international organizations have not yet investigated the cases properly. The Islamic Republic of Iran holds the world record in executing people per capita. It is also, according to Amnesty International, a leading executioner of children.
Theories and concepts that promote ideas such as the entire Muslim world being victims, and that "educated" people should refrain from criticizing extremist Muslims and radical Islam -- and that "intelligent" people should only blame the West for the problems in the world -- are not just simplistic; they are dangerous. They provide a platform for extremist Muslim leaders, terrorist groups, and Islamist regimes to prove to their followers that they are correct in pursuing their fundamentalist agenda.
This accommodation of extremist Muslims by leaders in the West not only helps them recruit more people to target Westerners, and incite anti-Western, anti-Christian, and anti-Semitic sentiments, but more importantly, it tramples the millions of ordinary Muslims who seek to promote in their homelands values such as the institutions of democracy, freedom of speech, separation of religion and state, the independence of education and the judiciary, and equal justice under the law.
*Dr. Majid Rafizadeh, is a business strategic 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 several 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.

We and our Friends in Italy and Spain

Eyad Abu Shakra/Asharq Al Awsat/June 12/18
It would be absurd to compare the Scandinavian states, Switzerland and the United Kingdom, well-established democratic systems, with the countries of the Arab East which have imported democracy as nothing but as a merchandise alien to their traditions.
Even before the Syrian revolt of 2011, only the regime’s propaganda machine used to claim and believe Syria was a true multiparty parliamentary democracy. Still, for a while, the country lived through a short period of free elections albeit against a backdrop of traditional and tribal political feudalism, and later army officers’ political meddling. That period ended in 1949 with the three military coups of Hosni Al-Za’im, Sami Al-Hinnawi and Adib Al-Shishakli. Later on, there was another brief ‘democratic spring’ during the mid-1950s after bringing down Al-Shishakli’s regime; however, ‘barrack wars’ between competing political factions within the army, during the tense years of the ‘Cold War’ and ‘regional pacts of containment’, pushed both army officers and politicians to run with their problems to Nasser’s Egypt. That brief ‘spring’ was thus brought to an end by the establishment of the United Arab Republic (UAR) created by the union of Egypt and Syria, and what came after it.Well, if war-torn Syria is surely out of the equation; what about Iraq and Lebanon?
Iraq experienced elections too in the first half of the 20th century, but democracy was cut short by the 1936 coup led by General Bakr Sidqi, and the internationally-connected conflicts (namely the Anglo-German confrontation) that followed, and the growing political role played by nationalist army officers led by what was known ‘The Golden Quartet’… and continues to be almost non-existent. Lebanon, on the other hand, has tried representative councils for much longer periods than its two larger neighbours. After the establishment of the ‘Mutassarrifiyyah’ (directly-governed autonomous district) system in Mount Lebanon (the nucleus of present-day Lebanon) in 1861, after a bloody sectarian civil war, an ‘Administrative Council’ was founded to represent various areas and religious sects.
Later, in the early 20th century, Lebanon had both a parliament and a senate. Party politics flourished with strong feudal and sectarian influences; and after 1943, independent Lebanon was able to at least maintain an ‘appearance’ of a democracy even when going through conflicts, revolts, wars, and later ‘de facto occupation’.Today, both Iraq and Lebanon ‘appear’ to practice democracy, as they have political parties that are represented in government. The truth, however, is different, neither country has the culture or tradition to tolerate the ‘other opinion’, which is a must in any solid democratic environment that accepts the right of opposing, seeking accountability, and rotation of power. In terms of sovereignty and independence too both countries are under ‘de facto occupation’, thus their sovereignty is deficient, and they lack broad national consensus and responsible genuine democratic institutions.
Given the above, some may rightly argue that not all countries that practice electoral democracy – even in Europe – have deeply-rooted democratic traditions. This is most certainly true of some south European countries which were not members of the old Communist bloc. It applies to Greece which gave the world the word ‘democracy’, Italy where Niccolo Machiavelli was born, and Spain and Portugal that have spread their culture far and wide throughout the globe. But, marking the birth of the two new governments in Italy and Spain, I shall limit this discussion to these two countries.
The democratic traditions of Italy and Spain, which are southern Europe’s most populous countries along with France, do not compare favorably with those of their northern European counterparts; and below are some examples:
1- Both countries lived under the Fascist rules of Benito Mussolini and Francisco Franco who promoted dreams of past empires as an escape from the fragility of the two current state entities that comprised former kingdoms and duchies. For a while Mussolini’s ‘Roman’ dream and Franco’s attempt to bring back the Spanish Empire’s past glory served the cause of keeping Italy and Spain together in the face of Leftist, Liberal, Republican and secessionist challenges; and later the atmosphere of the ‘Cold War’ was an added bonus for both entities. The situation, however, is now different, as there are no guarantees that the two countries would remain intact, given the vigor of what were dormant but strong secessionist sentiments. This vigor has been brought about by the pressures of globalization and the isolationist – even racist – reactions against it.
2- The Mussolini and Franco experiments, each in its own way, ‘legalized’ political radicalism in both Italy and Spain, as they weakened broad consensus and accorded credibility to extremists on both Right and Left. Today, radical and ‘regional’ parties are not in the margin but rather in the mainstream of Italian and Spanish politics. Even when the multi-winged Christian Democrats were the strongest party in the Italian parliament, their main competitors were not the Socialists or Liberals but the Italian Communist Party, the west’s largest Communist organization.
3- The legacy of Fascism, in both Italy and Spain, which caused fragility in the political system itself as well as weak national consensus, allowed the emergence of new and heterogeneous populist and protest movements. In fact, Italy, for long forced to live under a ‘co-existence of necessity’ between the Christian Democrats, Communists, as well as socialists, liberal, and conservatives parties, finds itself today a hostage of two relatively young populist movements which have formed the new coalition government, that many doubt its viability.
4- The old diverse nature of both Italy and Spain has contributed to the economic and development disparity, which in turn, is further fueling secessionist and racist sentiments. Italy’s north, namely Lombardy, Veneto and Piedmont are by far richer (in terms of per capita income, productivity, employment and social development) than the regions of the south. In Spain too, Catalonia is by far richer than the poor regions of the south and southwest. The crisis recently caused by refugees and immigrants crossing the Mediterranean, especially to southern Italy and southern Spain made the already volatile situation even worse, exacerbating fear and hatred.
5- Due to Italy’s and Spain’s immature democracies, institutional accountability and truly independent judiciary have proven too weak to remain immune against corruption. The presence of the Mafia was an additional problem in Italy that eventually shook the political system and destroyed the Christian Democrats who dominated the country’s political scene between the end of WWII and the end of ‘The Cold War’. To conclude, it is true to say that the problems of both Italy and Spain are serious and their democracy is fragile, however, it is also true that their parties accept rotation of power, and that they are indeed two sovereign states. On the other hand, given regional ambitions and international confusion, refusing rotation of power and ignoring deficient sovereignty are the most serious threats facing the Arab East.

10 Books for a Summer Reading List
Barry Ritholtz/Bloomberg/June 12/18
It’s that time of year! With Memorial Day coming, the summer reading season gets underway. Here are 10 of the most promising titles for beach and porch.
A few caveats: First, most on this list are new, though there are some older titles. Second, the list is based on my personal interests and not the pitches of book agents or publicists. And last, I will actually read them — at least, most of them.
On to the book list!“Bad Blood: Secrets and Lies in a Silicon Valley Startup” (2018) by John Carreyrou. Carreyrou broke the story about the Theranos fraud despite pressure and intimidation from lawyers even as the blood-testing company’s valuation approached $10 billion. But what really makes this such an amazing tale is how many people failed to do even the most basic due diligence, relying instead on the roster of all-star investors and directors. Everyone just assumed everyone else had checked out the company, its leaders and even the basic science behind its technology. It was a recipe for disaster; Theranos founder and Chief Executive Officer Elizabeth Holmes has already settled accusations of securities fraud.
“Rocket Men: The Daring Odyssey of Apollo 8 and the Astronauts Who Made Man's First Journey to the Moon” (2018) by Robert Kurson. I remember as a small child being taken out of class, brought into an auditorium with the rest of the school to watch the very first moon landing on a black-and-white television propped up on the stage. If you are of that generation, or are a space geek, then this looks like it’s a must-read. “Measure What Matters: How Google, Bono, and the Gates Foundation Rock the World with OKRs (2018) by John Doerr. I consider us lucky to live in an era where successful rock ‘n’ rollers, hedge-fund managers and now venture capitalists feel compelled to share what they have learned over the course of their careers. OKR stands for “objectives and key results,” the goal-setting system Doerr learned when he was an engineer at Intel in the 1970s under the legendary Andy Grove.
“Black Edge: Inside Information, Dirty Money, and the Quest to Bring Down the Most Wanted Man on Wall Street” (2018) by Sheelah Kolhatkar. Documents the seven-year probe by Securities and Exchange Commission into giant hedge fund SAC. Even though the firm was closed and several of its employees were found guilty of wrongdoing, Steve Cohen, the trading wizard behind it, survived to fight another day. Cohen had a two-year suspension from the securities industries, now expired. He has since opened his family office, Point 72, to investors. Another book that looks to read like a thriller.
“Factfulness: Ten Reasons We're Wrong About the World-and Why Things Are Better Than You Think” (2018) by Hans Rosling. The data illustrations and TED talks of Hans Rosling went viral for all of the right reasons: They were informative, educational and fascinating. If you are at all interested in data analysis and how to look at the world objectively, then I suspect like me, you are looking forward to reading this book.
“On Grand Strategy” (2018) by John Lewis Gaddis. Written by the Pulitzer Prize-winning author and professor of military and naval history at Yale University, this book is timely: strategy is central to the fraught situation on the Korean Peninsula, trade negotiations with China and the termination of the Iran nuclear agreement. There are lessons here for investors. “Killers of the Flower Moon: The Osage Murders and the Birth of the FBI” (2009) by David Grann. I first learned about the Osage murders when researching FBI history for another project. The story seems almost too fantastical to be real. But real it was, a mesmerizing and horrible tale of murder of an entire family to steal oil rights. The book, written by the author of “The Lost City of Z: A Tale of Deadly Obsession in the Amazon,” comes highly recommended.
“Robin” (2018) by Dave Itzkoff. I was a big fan of the improv wizard and comic genius that was Robin Williams, and admired the films in which he starred, including “Good Morning, Vietnam,” “Dead Poets Society,” “The Fisher King” “Aladdin” and “Mrs. Doubtfire.” But I had no idea he suffered from a debilitating and ultimately fatal depression. This looks to be a fascinating read.  “The Evolution of Beauty: How Darwin's Forgotten Theory of Mate Choice Shapes the Animal World — and Us” (2017): Richard O. Prum. Evolution helps to explain a lot about the natural world, but it doesn’t fully explain beauty and mate choice in animals or in people. By a professor of ornithology at Yale University, this looks like a tale in great natural sciences. “A World Lit Only by Fire: The Medieval Mind and the Renaissance: Portrait of an Age” (1992): William Manchester. I read the sentence “In the year 1500, after a thousand years of neglect, the roads built by the Romans were still the best on the continent” — and I was hooked. You will be, too.

Has boycott of Qatar failed?
Abdulrahman al-Rashed/Al Arabiya/June 12/18
Recently published articles marking the first year since the boycott of Qatar have glorified Qatar’s steadfastness and success as part of a public relations campaign. It is clear that Qatar has not stopped its attempts, with all means at its command, to restore relations; however, it has not succeeded. A propaganda report said Qatar has enough to withstand the “blockade” for 100 years and that the four boycotting countries will not be able to harm Qatari economy and the government’s capabilities. Since Qatar has not been affected and it does not care, then why does it make this effort to convince official American institutions to intervene to end the severance of ties? Why is it running in all directions and calling on others to intervene and force the four countries to restore ties with it?
The four countries are well aware of these two points that are very clear: Qatar is a small market and a large bank. This means that Qatar can through its abundant funds provide the needs of its small market from any place in the world via airfreight. The illusion that the weapon of the economy will force it to make political concessions never existed to begin with.
If Doha wants to expand imports, exports and civil and military cooperation with Tehran, it will clash with the US, which subjects countries that deal with Iran to harsh sanctions
So why did the four countries boycott Qatar, close their borders and prevent it from using their airspace and land routes to transfer goods? The four countries complain that Qatar funds extremist groups, which oppose them and supports everything that threatens them with domestic chaos.
They have previously resorted to several solutions to resolve this including signing agreements but Doha did not respect them. Therefore, they decided to cut their diplomatic, consular and economic ties with it. As a result, they closed their airspace and land routes with Doha. The boycott pained Qatar but this is not a goal in itself. There were five million passengers from Saudi Arabia, which the Qatari Airways transported every year. Transporting them has completely halted. Most of the numbers announced by Qatari institutions are diluted and do not express the size of their real losses; however, this will not subject them to bankruptcy.
What has the decision achieved?
It achieved the goals of the four countries, and specifically Saudi Arabia, the UAE and Bahrain considering that Egypt is less connected with Doha. The boycott ended Qatar’s interferences in these countries’ internal affairs after it became prohibited to cooperate and deal with any Qatari party or with any party that can be an agent of Qatar. The internal networks that work for Qatar in these countries and that benefitted from the open borders were destroyed. The four countries do not need Qatar, neither on the political nor on the economic levels. Therefore, they, too, can live without it for 100 years.
However, the Qatari government seems alone and isolated, and it is aware that its people are not pleased with its interferences in other countries’ affairs and are certainly not happy to see the gates of four countries – which they see as the most important ones for them – closed in their face.
The people of the four boycotting countries do not care much about cancelling Qatar from the map of their visits as Qatar is not a common destination and there are plenty of other alternatives.
What about Qatar’s threat of rapprochement with Iran? Good ties between Doha and Tehran have existed before the boycott and represented a problem that thwarted coordination in the Gulf Cooperation Council because of Qatar. If Doha wants to expand imports, exports and civil and military cooperation with Tehran, it will clash with the US, which subjects countries that deal with Iran to harsh sanctions especially within vital fields that are linked to American companies and interests.
Finally, most of what has been written to glorify Qatar’s steadfastness is propaganda or an incomplete analysis that does not understand the nature of the long dispute with Doha. The goal is to isolate Doha and its policies and to stop dealing with it.

Saving Jordan and discernment in speech

Abdullah bin Bijad Al-Otaibi/Al Arabiya/June 12/18
When observing the policies of the region’s countries, we notice their loyalty to one of these two: the stability of countries or the stability of chaos. The first approach is led by Saudi Arabia and its strong alliance with the UAE. The second one is led by Iran, Turkey, Qatar and the Muslim Brotherhood. This is how the region’s situation, which has been as such for over a decade, can be summed up. Jordan’s political position towards Iran has been clear since before the “Arab Spring” thanks to King Abdullah II’s statements about Iran’s crescent and the Iranian snake. However, Jordan’s position regarding fighting fundamentalism and terrorism presented a different model that can be subject to criticism. However, all this should be viewed in context of the capabilities of Jordan; a country that has been suffering economically due to shortage of resources and capabilities as, in the past few decades, it has become a place of refuge for a number of Arab peoples who have suffered from deadly wars and great unrest. The Muslim Brotherhood sees Jordan as an outlet for its suffocating regional exclusion and Qatar wants to show the might of its media and restore its treachery, which it thought had helped it make political gains during what was falsely called the ‘Arab Spring.’ Thus, Jordan is a victim of several factors. The latest Jordanian crisis is due to internal causes resulting from the lack of economic resources, but it also has other important regional triggers. Iran needs to weaken Jordan to compensate its loss in Iraq. Similarly, the Muslim Brotherhood sees Jordan as an outlet for its suffocating regional exclusion and Qatar wants to show the might of its media and restore its treachery, which it thought had helped it make political gains during what was falsely called the ‘Arab Spring.’ Thus, Jordan is a victim of several factors that have threatened its stability and civil accord.
Part of Saudi-led coalition
Let’s recall some of Jordan’s recent political positions. Jordan is a partner in the Arab Coalition for the support of legitimacy in Yemen and is a partner in the Islamic Military Coalition to Combat Terrorism. After the biggest military maneuver in the eastern region of Saudi Arabia, King Abdullah II and leaders of the Arab salvation alliance met with the Saudi Crown prince along with the Bahraini King, the Crown Prince of Abu Dhabi and the Egyptian president. This means that this alliance is the natural extension for Jordan politically and economically. Jordan is also an important partner for one of the biggest new Saudi project — the Neom project which is located on its borders with Saudi Arabia and Egypt and which represents an ambitious dream that will have a major positive impact on all three countries.
King Salman bin Abdul Aziz is a decisive king, and the policies of Saudi Arabia support stability of Arab countries. The Saudi king has thus called for a quadripartite meeting to be held in Mecca to help Jordan confront its suffocating economic crisis and strengthen Jordan’s stability and security.
This meeting included Saudi Arabia and its strongest ally, the UAE, as well as Kuwait which has been a supporting partner in a number of major crises in the region. The meeting’s aim is to provide urgent and effective assistance to save the brotherly country Jordan.
The Mecca Summit
Saudi Arabia and the UAE have formed an alliance that saves Arab countries during all of the region’s tough crises, particularly after the so-called ‘Arab Spring.’ The two countries jointly confronted the challenges that threatened the stability, security and sovereignty of Arab countries; with the political, economic and military power, even if they had to oppose policies of major countries in the world. Recent history is the best witness to that. Apart from the lack of clarity in the near past, the differences between the parties in the region have begun to appear. The major rearrangement of the balance of power and the strength of alliances have also emerged. The huge gap between the makers of the future and those who are trapped in the sectarian and fundamentalist past has become obvious. It’s now everyone’s duty to specify his position from these conflicts. It’s clear who the savior and the supporter are and it’s even clearer who the bitter enemy is. The Jordanian people’s love for their brothers in the Gulf is clear, and the wisdom of King Abdullah II and his crown prince is also clear. The Mecca meeting will mark the discernment in speech.

We and our friends in Italy and Spain
Eyad Abu Shakra/Al Arabiya/June 12/18
It would be absurd to compare the Scandinavian states, Switzerland and the United Kingdom, well-established democratic systems, with the countries of the Arab East, which have imported democracy as nothing but as a merchandise alien to their traditions.
Even before the Syrian revolt of 2011, only the regime’s propaganda machine used to claim and believe Syria was a true multiparty parliamentary democracy. Still, for a while, the country lived through a short period of free elections albeit against a backdrop of traditional and tribal political feudalism, and later army officers’ political meddling. That period ended in 1949 with the three military coups of Hosni al-Za’im, Sami al-Hinnawi and Adib al-Shishakli. Later on, there was another brief ‘democratic spring’ during the mid-1950s after bringing down al-Shishakli’s regime; however, ‘barrack wars’ between competing political factions within the army, during the tense years of the Cold War and ‘regional pacts of containment’, pushed both army officers and politicians to run with their problems to Nasser’s Egypt. That brief ‘spring’ was thus brought to an end by the establishment of the United Arab Republic (UAR) created by the union of Egypt and Syria, and what came after it. Well, if war-torn Syria is surely out of the equation; what about Iraq and Lebanon?
Iraq experienced elections too in the first half of the 20th century, but democracy was cut short by the 1936 coup led by General Bakr Sidqi, and the internationally-connected conflicts (namely the Anglo-German confrontation) that followed, and the growing political role played by nationalist army officers led by what was known ‘The Golden Quartet’… and continues to be almost non-existent. It is true to say that the problems of both Italy and Spain are serious and their democracy is fragile, however, it is also true that their parties accept rotation of power, and that they are indeed two sovereign states
Representative councils
Lebanon, on the other hand, has tried representative councils for much longer periods than its two larger neighbors. After the establishment of the Mutassarrifiyyah (directly-governed autonomous district) system in Mount Lebanon (the nucleus of present-day Lebanon) in 1861, after a bloody sectarian civil war, an Administrative Council was founded to represent various areas and religious sects. Later, in the early 20th century, Lebanon had both a parliament and a senate. Party politics flourished with strong feudal and sectarian influences; and after 1943, independent Lebanon was able to at least maintain an ‘appearance’ of a democracy even when going through conflicts, revolts, wars, and later ‘de facto occupation’. Today, both Iraq and Lebanon appear to practice democracy, as they have political parties that are represented in government. The truth, however, is different, neither country has the culture or tradition to tolerate the other opinion, which is a must in any solid democratic environment that accepts the right of opposing, seeking accountability, and rotation of power. In terms of sovereignty and independence too both countries are under “de facto occupation”, thus their sovereignty is deficient, and they lack broad national consensus and responsible genuine democratic institutions. Given the above, some may rightly argue that not all countries that practice electoral democracy – even in Europe – have deeply-rooted democratic traditions. This is most certainly true of some south European countries, which were not members of the old Communist bloc. It applies to Greece, which gave the world the word ‘democracy’, Italy where Niccolo Machiavelli was born, and Spain and Portugal that have spread their culture far and wide throughout the globe. But, marking the birth of the two new governments in Italy and Spain, I shall limit this discussion to these two countries.
Northern European counterparts
The democratic traditions of Italy and Spain, which are southern Europe’s most populous countries along with France, do not compare favorably with those of their northern European counterparts; and below are some examples:
1- Both countries lived under the Fascist rules of Benito Mussolini and Francisco Franco who promoted dreams of past empires as an escape from the fragility of the two current state entities that comprised former kingdoms and duchies. For a while Mussolini’s ‘Roman’ dream and Franco’s attempt to bring back the Spanish Empire’s past glory served the cause of keeping Italy and Spain together in the face of Leftist, Liberal, Republican and secessionist challenges; and later the atmosphere of the ‘Cold War’ was an added bonus for both entities. The situation, however, is now different, as there are no guarantees that the two countries would remain intact, given the vigor of what were dormant but strong secessionist sentiments. This vigor has been brought about by the pressures of globalization and the isolationist – even racist – reactions against it.
2- The Mussolini and Franco experiments, each in its own way, ‘legalized’ political radicalism in both Italy and Spain, as they weakened broad consensus and accorded credibility to extremists on both Right and Left. Today, radical and ‘regional’ parties are not in the margin but rather in the mainstream of Italian and Spanish politics. Even when the multi-winged Christian Democrats were the strongest party in the Italian parliament, their main competitors were not the Socialists or Liberals but the Italian Communist Party, the west’s largest Communist organization.
3- The legacy of Fascism, in both Italy and Spain, which caused fragility in the political system itself as well as weak national consensus, allowed the emergence of new and heterogeneous populist and protest movements. In fact, Italy, for long forced to live under a ‘co-existence of necessity’ between the Christian Democrats, Communists, as well as socialists, liberal, and conservatives parties, finds itself today a hostage of two relatively young populist movements which have formed the new coalition government, that many doubt its viability.
4- The old diverse nature of both Italy and Spain has contributed to the economic and development disparity, which in turn, is further fueling secessionist and racist sentiments. Italy’s north, namely Lombardy, Veneto and Piedmont are by far richer (in terms of per capita income, productivity, employment and social development) than the regions of the south. In Spain too, Catalonia is by far richer than the poor regions of the south and southwest. The crisis recently caused by refugees and immigrants crossing the Mediterranean, especially to southern Italy and southern Spain made the already volatile situation even worse, exacerbating fear and hatred.
5- Due to Italy’s and Spain’s immature democracies, institutional accountability and truly independent judiciary have proven too weak to remain immune against corruption. The presence of the Mafia was an additional problem in Italy that eventually shook the political system and destroyed the Christian Democrats who dominated the country’s political scene between the end of WWII and the end of ‘The Cold War’. To conclude, it is true to say that the problems of both Italy and Spain are serious and their democracy is fragile, however, it is also true that their parties accept rotation of power, and that they are indeed two sovereign states. On the other hand, given regional ambitions and international confusion, refusing rotation of power and ignoring deficient sovereignty are the most serious threats facing the Arab East.

Anthony Bourdain: A personal eulogy to the man I never met
Walid Jawad/Al Arabiya/June 12/18
“No Reservation,” the Anthony Bourdain travel show, was my first experience binge-watching any TV show. Since that time, a few years ago, I became a true fan of the show and the man.
Two weeks ago, I added his newer CNN show “Parts Unknown” to my “to-watch” list. Now that I have broken the generational gap, no longer do I watch shows when they come out, I wait until I can binge-watch them one season at a time.
As my cell phone blew up yesterday morning, Washington, DC local time, with breaking news of Tony’s death, I had the urge to watch the Saudi episode one more time. A personal eulogy to the man. I felt the loss of this intrepid globetrotter in a way I haven’t felt about someone I never met. I felt the loss of a talented TV host who was able to show us the human factor in peoples we typically brush aside in simplistic, one dimensional, and almost always wrong stereotypical fashion. That Saudi episode might have been an eye-opener for many, but it was a nostalgic home-video of sorts to someone like me. I left Saudi Arabia over 20 years ago without going back for any meaningful visits. As I re-watched the episode, I found myself identifying with Danya al-Hamrani, the warm and welcoming host who invited Mr. Bourdain to Saudi Arabia.
This fellow American-born Saudi, missed out on many Saudi specific experiences as I did. like Danya (up to the point of the filming of the episode), I never ate Dhub (desert lizard), camel meat, or lamb hearts. I am inspired now to make a culinary trip to Saudi Arabia suspending my vegetarianism to summon the courage to try such “delicacies.”
The episode reminded me of a time of simplicity and innocence. Even Tony’s demeanor in the episode is playful and cheerful. A markedly different Tony from the one who appears in other episodes. I invite you to watch that episode if you haven’t yet, Episode#13 of Season 4, titled simply: Saudi Arabia. In contrast, you can pick up on Tony’s undercurrent of pompousness, standoffishness, or even contemptuousness show host personality at times in some other episodes.
The uniqueness of Anthony Bourdain’s shows is its ability to zoom out showing us what is beyond the margins of the news frame; i.e. beyond the myopic focus on violence
His unlikely mission
As I reflect on the man and his body of aired work I can’t help but admire Tony’s courage and skill in breaking down the prevailing dehumanizing facade we readily accept as we watch the alluring magical lightbox. The same facade that serves intended or unintended agenda of fear, defensiveness, divisiveness, and hatred. His work was a serious attempt to counterbalance the destructive effects of daily news, even if it were not what he was set out to do.
An impossible situation as his weekly show stood firmly in the sea of relentless fear spewing collective. Yet he was able to move the needle farther along the scale of human connectedness than any other show I can think of.
They teach in journalism that common events are not newsworthy like when a dog bites a man. But when a man bites a dog it becomes an incident worthy of feeding the 24-hour news cycle.
Watching the news, we find the uncommon numerous and violence ubiquitous making what is supposed to be the exception common. Viewers can’t be blamed to point to TV sets concluding that the world is a dangerous place.
The sheer number of violent events locally and internationally prompts viewers to divide the world into two camps: evil perpetrators and innocent victims. More troubling is that evil seems to be winning by virtue of imposing its physical will on people.
I, for one, am guilty of adding fuel to the fire in more ways than I care to enumerate. Most of us in the media, if not all, believe that you, our fellow thinking humans, need to be informed and that it’s our mission to make you aware of such events.
Once you become knowledgeable, you are better equipped to make informed decisions about the world you live in. Unfortunately, the law of unintended consequences overshadows the intended benefits of gaining that knowledge.
Adopting a cause
The news viewing public fall into three major categories: some will decide to adopt a cause and fight, while others become overwhelmed and fearful of the environment and suspicious of humanity itself. And in between, those who will shutdown dismissing such reality, tuning out the anxiety-filled chatter of new channels. A social equivalent to fight, flight, or freeze responses. Arts, entertainment, and hobbies are great options to attempt striking a personal balance, yet external fear mongering of the 24-hour news cycle remains unchecked. These channels have a purpose to serve and should continue their mission. It behooves us to understand the side effects. The uniqueness of Anthony Bourdain’s shows is its ability to zoom out showing us what is beyond the margins of the news frame; i.e. beyond the myopic focus on violence. As much as the news wants to compels us to the contrary, violence is not an inevitability.
If we accept violence as the norm, we are surrendering intellectually under the weight of the emotional pressure of fear and sadness. The bigger picture Tony provided is a good reminder. Some of his episodes featured people from unfavorable countries or war-torn regions, yet we identify with them as human beings. It is essential to understand that conflict is not "bad" in and of itself. In fact, conflict is a driving force to improve the human condition. Resolving conflicts between people leads to equality. Resolving conflict between us and our environment leads to innovation. Only when conflict turns violent that it becomes “bad.”
Tony’s showed us people from around the world consumed by what humans everywhere else are consumed by, living a peaceful and happy life. We got to know people of other cultures not as tourist, rather as locals. He was able to challenge his own stereotypical ideas of others and along the way broke our disinterested judgments of others. I mourn the man because I mourn the mission. There is no one out there who can rise to the challenge. I will go back to my “to-watch” list and put Tony’s shows on top my binge-watching cue. I know this time I will watch his shows with the eyes of an anthropologist and the mind of a conflict resolver.