Detailed Lebanese & Lebanese Related LCCC English New Bulletin For September 16/2018
Compiled & Prepared by: Elias Bejjani

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Bible Quotations
Ask, and it will be given to you; search, and you will find; knock, and the door will be opened for you
Luke 11/09-13: "‘So I say to you, Ask, and it will be given to you; search, and you will find; knock, and the door will be opened for you. For everyone who asks receives, and everyone who searches finds, and for everyone who knocks, the door will be opened. Is there anyone among you who, if your child asks for a fish, will give a snake instead of a fish?Or if the child asks for an egg, will give a scorpion? If you then, who are evil, know how to give good gifts to your children, how much more will the heavenly Father give the Holy Spirit to those who ask him!"

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Titles For The Latest LCCC Bulletin analysis & editorials from miscellaneous sources published on September 15-16/18
Prosecution Highlights Hezbollah, Syrian Links to Hariri Assassination/Hanin Ghaddar/The Washington Institute/September 15/18
US Democrats to Palestinians: We Won’t Fight Your War”/DEBKAfile/September 15/18
EU to Hold Tripoli Ceasefire Violators Accountable/Khaled Mahmoud /Asharq Al-Awsat/September,15/18
Greece: "Humanitarian Aid" Organization's People-Smuggling/Maria Polizoidou/Gatestone Institute/September 15, 2018
In Basra, is it a revolution or a disaster/Hazem al-Amin/Al Arabiya/September 15/18
Yemen peace talks: Houthis setting conditions on a plane staircase/Amal Abdulaziz Al–Hazani/Al Arabiya/September 15/18
Tripoli and Idlib: A question of strategies and possibilities/Radwan al-Sayed/Al Arabiya/September 15/18
World’s Post-Lehman Legacy/Brian Chappatta/Bloomberg View/September 15/18

Titles For The Latest LCCC Lebanese Related News published on September 15-16/18
Tension Between Lebanon’s ‘Hezbollah’, FPM over Electricity Crisis
Report: No U.S. Plans to Interfere in Lebanon Govt. Formation
Hariri: Challenges ahead Necessitate Accord to Lineup Cabinet
Report: SA to Appoint New Ambassador to Lebanon, UAE Praises Hariri
Rahi: To lower ceiling of demands to facilitate birth of government
Hariri hopes political parties will facilitate government formation "because they know the challenges facing us"
Bassil meets International Relations Minister in Quebec
Berri: Offending Kuwait and its Emir is rejected and condemned by all standards
PSP denounces attack against Kuwait and its Emir, deems it reprehensible
Jumblatt meets with Russian Ambassador in Clemenceau
Sayegh: Cabinet Formation Stalemate Encloses Greater Problem
Zeaiter denies all tweets about cow ship issue
Hankache Renews Call for Rescue Government
Prosecution Highlights Hezbollah, Syrian Links to Hariri Assassination


Titles For The Latest LCCC Bulletin For Miscellaneous Reports And News published on September 15-16/18
US Democrats to Palestinians: We Won’t Fight Your War”
Defying Dangers, Idlib Residents Protest against Assad
Time Limit of Few Weeks to Dissolve HTS in Syria’s Idlib
Turkey-Russia Discord over Idlib Defers Regime Offensive, for Now
Halbousi Elected as Iraq’s Parliament Speaker
Egyptian Court Orders Arrest of Mubarak's Sons in Corruption Case
Egypt Arrests 6 'Brotherhood' Members in Foiled Alexandria Terrorist Plot
Qatar Ends Support for Hamas Educational Institution in Gaza
Trump, Pompeo Bash Ex-Secretary of State Kerry on Iran Talks
Pompeo: US studying sanction waivers against entities dealing with Iran
 
The Latest LCCC Lebanese Related News published on September 15-16/18
Tension Between Lebanon’s ‘Hezbollah’, FPM over Electricity Crisis
Beirut - Nazeer Rida/Asharq Al-Awsat/Saturday, 15 September, 2018/Tension between “Hezbollah” and the Free Patriotic Movement over an electricity crisis in areas mainly inhabited by Shiites boiled over this week. Members from Hezbollah’s parliamentary bloc sent on Thursday an indirect message to caretaker Energy Minister Cesar Abi Khalil, who belongs to the FPM. “Unbalanced power cuts across Lebanon could spark popular unrest,” the bloc warned following its weekly meeting. "The areas of Tyre, Nabatieh, Baalbek-Hermel and the southern suburbs of Beirut are once again appealing to the Ministry of Energy and Electricite du Liban (EDL) to honor their commitments," the statement read. Those areas are inhabited by Shiites who mainly back Hezbollah and its ally the Amal Movement. This year, the Lebanese Forces, Amal and the Marada Movement have criticized the FPM’s electricity plan, blaming it for the failure to solve the country’s power crisis. Despite its rhetoric against the Energy Minister, a member of the “Hezbollah” parliamentary bloc placed the party’s latest statement in the “framework of demanding people’s rights.”MP Walid Sukkarieh, who is close to the party, stressed the bloc was not at loggerheads with the ministry, rather it was “warning it.”“We are not criticizing based on political grounds, but based on calls to address the situation of the areas deprived of electricity,” Sukkarieh said, adding that the crisis is the result of the ministry’s failure to adopt a comprehensive policy, which starts by producing energy and later expanding the adequate networks to deliver electricity to all areas
.

Report: No U.S. Plans to Interfere in Lebanon Govt. Formation
Naharnet/September 15/18/The United States is “keen” on Lebanon’s political stability and “encourages” the formation of a new government but “without showing any intention” to intervene directly in this regard mainly the “inclusion of Hizbullah” in the new Cabinet, al-Joumhouria daily reported on Saturday. The daily said that “visitors to the U.S.” have reflected keenness of US officials on Lebanon’s political stability, regularity of its constitutional institutions and encouragement for lining up a Cabinet “without any intention to directly interfere in this process.” According to the US officials, the security situation in Lebanon remains a key priority for the United States, and Washington welcomes the efforts of the Lebanese security services to maintain stability in Lebanon and to combat terrorist organizations. It also “places in its priorities the continued full support of the Lebanese army to enable it to carry out its tasks.”Although the US officials view Hizbullah as a “hostile terrorist organization, posing a threat to Lebanon and the stability in the region,” but it is interesting to note that these officials did not speak of any American veto to involve the party in the government, it said. "We have already confirmed our position that the formation of the Lebanese government is a Lebanese affair," one official said in response to a direct question about Hizbullah’s participation in the government.

Hariri: Challenges ahead Necessitate Accord to Lineup Cabinet
Naharnet/September 15/18/Prime Minister-designate Saad Hariri expressed his hopes that disagreements between political parties “disappear” in order to form a government and face the challenges ahead, his media office said on Saturday. He said: “My belief is that all political parties know the challenges we face, whether on the regional, security, economic or environmental levels. We must be a bit humble and think more about the country because the economic situation needs attention, and we have a historic opportunity through the CEDRE conference to advance the country”.Hariri’s words came during a dinner held by the General Manager of Khatib & Alami Company, Samir al-Khatib, yesterday evening in his residence in Mazboud, Iqlim al-Kharroub, in honor of the UAE Ambassador Hamad al-Shamsi. Premier Hariri, ex-Premier Fouad Siniora, the caretaker Ministers of Environment Tarek al-Khatib, Telecommunications Jamal Jarrah, and Culture Ghattas Khoury, MP Bilal Abdallah, the Saudi Ambassador to Lebanon Walid al-Bukhari, the Egyptian Ambassador Nazih Naggari, the Director General of General Security Major General Abbas Ibrahim, and the Chairman of the Chambers of Commerce and Industry Mohammad Choucair attended the dinner. At the onset of the dinner, held in the honor of ambassador Shamsi, Samir al-Khatib welcomed the guests and “our brothers in the Arab countries, which has always supported Lebanon, especially in the dark and difficult stages. The Taef Accord, sponsored by Saudi Arabia, was maybe the most important step in the history of modern Lebanon. The United Arab Emirates, along with Saudi Arabia, has always been at the forefront of Lebanon's supporters in good and bad times.”He concluded: “Lebanon has passed through more difficult circumstances and managed to overcome them, and we are sure that this country will be able to overcome all difficulties to form the next government.”For his part, Ambassador al-Shamsi said: “Today we inaugurated some projects, laid the foundation stone for others and checked on projects under implementation. Next month we will be in the Bekaa with Minister Jarrah and in Akkar. All appreciation and love for Lebanon. The United Arab Emirates has a message of love and tolerance for this country and we respect and appreciate all those who are present.”Hariri then thanked al-Khatib and said: “Here we feel like we are in our home. We will continue this journey with Walid Jumblatt, because this relationship is a historical one, whether with my father, with me or with Taymour. We will continue the path of my late father, and neither will we abandon Walid bek nor will he abandon us.” He added: “We thank the Ambassador of the United Arab Emirates for this generous donation to this region that deserves many projects, like other Lebanese regions. The United Arab Emirates and Saudi Arabia have always supported us in all stages, in good and bad times, in times of war and in times of peace. You stood with us when the Lebanese disagreed together and when they reconciled. Thank you for the work you are doing and what you will do in other regions, in the Bekaa, Akkar, the South and all of Lebanon. I hope that we will pursue our work together. I hope that disagreements in the formation of the government will go away because all the political parties know the challenges facing us. We have a historic opportunity with the CEDRE conference, which approved 12.5 billion dollars to help Lebanon with essential projects. The world wants to help us, and we as Lebanese have to help ourselves.”

Report: SA to Appoint New Ambassador to Lebanon, UAE Praises Hariri
Naharnet/September 15/18/Saudi Arabia is reportedly set to appoint its Saudi charge d'affaires to Lebanon Walid al-Bukhari as the country's ambassador to Lebanon, al-Joumhouria daily reported on Saturday. Al-Bukhari had replaced ambassador to Lebanon Walid al-Yaacoub back in March after less than three months in office. He headed the Saudi diplomatic team in Lebanon. The Saudi move comes as “observers” noted the “words of praise” from UAE Ambassador Hamad al-Shamsi to PM-designate Saad Hariri during a tour on Friday to inspect development projects in Iqlim al-Kharroub.“Apart from politics and diplomacy, the projects are coordinated with Prime Minister Saad Hariri. He best represents Lebanon, legitimacy and state institutions, of a country with 18 sects. He is the right man in the right place,” were Shamsi’s words said the daily. Shamsi expressed hopes “that a government be formed soon to reflect Lebanon’s legitimacy and credibility to the countries of the world.”

Rahi: To lower ceiling of demands to facilitate birth of government
Sat 15 Sep 2018/NNA - Maronite Archbishop of Beirut and President of the Episcopal Media Committee, Archbishop Boulos Matar, held the annual dinner in support of the activities of the Catholic Information Center, under the patronage of Maronite Patriarch, Mar Bechara Boutros Rahi and the presence of caretaker Minister of Information, Melhem Riachy. Speaking during the event, Patriarch Rahi called on all political counterparts for more "concessions" to facilitate the birth of the long-awaited cabinet, stressing the importance of resolving urgent issues and addressing the deteriorating economic situation. Rahi regretted "the dropping political discourse between politicians," calling on the media outlets to play a primary role in lowering the political debate. In turn, Minister Riachy said that the Christian-Christian reconciliation was achieved to stay and continue, in spite of the distortions, abuses and changes that occurred to it. "We believe that this reconciliation protects both the free Christian and free Lebanese presence in Lebanon and in this East," he stressed. Finally, Riachy pointed out that he would be handing over to his successor the projects left behind in the corridors of the Secretariat Council of Ministers.

Hariri hopes political parties will facilitate government formation "because they know the challenges facing us"
Sat 15 Sep 2018/NNA - In a press release by Prime Minister-designate, Saad Hariri's Media Office on Saturday, it indicated that Hariri has expressed hope that "the disagreements we see in the government formation will disappear."
"My belief is that all political parties know the challenges we face, whether on the regional, security, economic or environmental levels. We must be a bit humble and think more about the country because the economic situation needs attention, and we have a historic opportunity through the CEDRE conference to advance the country," said the PM-designate.
Hariri's words came during a dinner held by the General Manager of Khatib & Alami Company, Samir al-Khatib, yesterday evening at his residence in Mazboud, Iqlim al-Kharroub, in honor of the UAE Ambassador Hamad al-Shamsi. PM-designate Hariri, former Premier Fouad Siniora, the caretaker Ministers of Environment Tarek al-Khatib, Tele-Communications Jamal Jarrah, and Culture Ghattas Khoury, MP Bilal Abdallah, the Saudi Ambassador to Lebanon Walid al-Bukhari, the Egyptian Ambassador Nazih Naggari, the Director General of General Security Major General Abbas Ibrahim, and the Chairman of the Chambers of Commerce and Industry Mohammad Choucair attended the dinner.
At the onset of the dinner, held in the honor of ambassador Shamsi, Samir al-Khatib welcomed the guests and "our brothers in the Arab countries, which has always supported Lebanon, especially in the dark and difficult stages. The Taef Accord, sponsored by Saudi Arabia, was maybe the most important step in the history of modern Lebanon. The United Arab Emirates, along with Saudi Arabia, has always been at the forefront of Lebanon's supporters in good and bad times."
He concluded: "Lebanon has passed through more difficult circumstances and managed to overcome them, and we are sure that this country will able to overcome all difficulties to form the next government." For his part, Ambassador al-Shamsi said: "Today we inaugurated some projects, laid the foundation stone for others and checked on projects under implementation. Next month we will be in the Bekaa with Minister Jarrah and in Akkar. All appreciation and love for Lebanon. The United Arab Emirates has a message of love and tolerance for this country and we respect and appreciate all those who are present."
PM-designate Hariri then thanked al-Khatib and said: "Here we feel like we are in our home, in this region, which has always been faithful to the path of Martyr Prime Minister Rafic Hariri and the Future Movement. We will continue this journey with Walid Jumblatt, because this relationship is a historical one, whether with my father, with me or with Taymour. We will continue the path of my late father, and neither will we abandon Walid bek nor will he abandon us." He added: "We thank the Ambassador of the United Arab Emirates for this generous donation to this region that deserves many projects, like other Lebanese regions. The United Arab Emirates and Saudi Arabia have always supported us in all stages, in good and bad times, in times of war and in times of peace. You stood with us when the Lebanese disagreed together and when they reconciled. Thank you for the work you are doing and what you will do in other regions, in the Bekaa, Akkar, the South and all of Lebanon. I hope that we will pursue our work together. On this occasion, I thank everyone for being present here in the residence of Samir al-Khatib who always gathers us when we have divergences. Lebanon's advantage over any other country is that we disagree during the day, and talk to each other again at night. I hope that these disagreements in the formation of the government will go away because all the political parties know the challenges facing us. We have a historic opportunity with the CEDRE conference, which approved 12.5 billion dollars to help Lebanon with essential projects. The world wants to help us, and we as Lebanese have to help ourselves."

Bassil meets International Relations Minister in Quebec
Sat 15 Sep 2018/NNA - Caretaker Foreign Affairs and Emigrants Minister, Gebran Bassil, met at the Palais des Congrès in Montreal this afternoon with Quebec's Minister of International Relations and La Francophonie, Christine St-Pierre. Discussions focused on the cultural and economic relations between Lebanon and Quebec.

Berri: Offending Kuwait and its Emir is rejected and condemned by all standards
Sat 15 Sep 2018/NNA - House Speaker Nabih Berri voiced Saturday his strong rejection of any abuse towards the State of Kuwait and its Emir, stressing in statement that "any offense to Kuwait and its Emir, Sheikh Sabah Al-Ahmad Al-Jaber Al-Sabah, is unacceptable and denounced by all standards." "The Lebanese will always remain indebted to Kuwait, its Emir and people, for all their support to Lebanon in the days of hardship and prosperity, and will allow nothing to disturb the historical relationship and brotherhood ties between the two countries," vowed Berri reassuringly.

PSP denounces attack against Kuwait and its Emir, deems it reprehensible
Sat 15 Sep 2018/NNA - In an issued statement by the Progressive Socialist Party's Media Office on Saturday, it condemned the "arrogant attack against Kuwait and its Emir, the friend of Lebanon, Sheikh Sabah Al-Ahmad Al-Sabah," considering such an act as "reprehensible."
"The policy of attacking Lebanon's friends is not new. It is a policy plotted for years, with the aim of distorting their reputation and striking their relationship with Lebanon," the statement indicated. It strongly deplored the "cheap manner of some symbols of the yellow press and the media," while recalling "the permanent support of the State of Kuwait and its Emir to Lebanon in the most difficult circumstances, and its political, moral and substantial assistance over the years, in addition to hosting thousands of Lebanese families and providing them with work opportunities."The Party urged the press to stop their "cheap and destructive tactics" while expressing utmost respect and gratitude to the Kuwait state, stressing on the "brotherly ties with the people, government and Emir of Kuwait, and on preserving their mutual historic relations with Lebanon and its people."

Jumblatt meets with Russian Ambassador in Clemenceau

Sat 15 Sep 2018/NNA - Progressive Socialist Party Chief, former Minister and MP Walid Jumblatt, met at his Clemenceau residence this evening with Russian Ambassador Alexander Zasypkin, with talks touching on the current situation in Lebanon and the region.
MP Wael Abu Faour and the PSP Senior Official Halim Abu Fakhreddine also attended the meeting.

Sayegh: Cabinet Formation Stalemate Encloses Greater Problem
Kataeb.org/Saturday 15th September 2018/Kataeb's Deputy-President Salim Sayegh on Saturday warned that the delay in the Cabinet formation could enclose dangerous signs, saying that the failure to form a government swiftly will entail negative repercussions on the country.
"Danger goes beyond the formation of the government. There is a double mission that needs to be accomplished: adressing the economic situation and find a way to bring Hezbollah back from Syria," he said in an interview on Future TV. Sayegh warned of attempts to use the government formation as a platform to dash and distort the Taef agreement, and, therefore, force a non-constitutional re-examination of prerogatives. "The problem is that each faction is trying to exercise leverage over the other. This would lead to an endless crisis." Sayegh stressed that the country cannot be built on corruption and wrongdoings, noting that what Lebanon is currently witnessing goes against the aspirations and ideas of late President Bachir Gemayel.

Zeaiter denies all tweets about cow ship issue
Sat 15 Sep 2018/NNA - Caretaker Agriculture Minister Ghazi Zeaiter categorically denied in a statement on Saturday all tweets pertaining to the cow ship issue, saying, "It seems that straining the atmosphere has become the hobby of some Twitter users among citizens and officials."
"The Ministry of Agriculture is keen on the Lebanese people's health and wellbeing against the anthrax, regardless of its source," stressed Zeaiter, regretting the spread of such groundless, false news.

Hankache Renews Call for Rescue Government
Kataeb.org/Saturday 15th September 2018/Kataeb MP Elias Hankache renewed his call for a small-scale rescue government that would manage the country until political consensus is reached on a larger Cabinet, ruling out an imminent breakthrough due to the ongoing wrangle over ministerial shares."We were promised that the first government in the new presidential term would be up to the challenges. However, there are still no signs indicating any progress," he said in an interview on the Australia-based 2ME Radio Arabic. Hankache stressed the need for political forces to make concessions, adding that political gains become worthless when the whole country is in jeopardy. The lawmaker also noted that the government formation stalemate proves that all the alliances sealed before the elections were transient and fake, stressing that this is the reason why the Kataeb party chose to run for the polls alone.

Prosecution Highlights Hezbollah, Syrian Links to Hariri Assassination
حنين غدار من موقع معهد واشنطن: الإدعاء في المحكمة الدولية الناظرة في اغتيال رفيق الحريري تسلط الضوء على دور إيران وحزب الله في جريمة الإغتيال

Hanin Ghaddar/The Washington Institute/September 15/18
http://eliasbejjaninews.com/archives/67492/hanin-ghaddar-the-washington-institute-prosecution-highlights-hezbollah-syrian-links-to-hariri-assassination-%D8%AD%D9%86%D9%8A%D9%86-%D8%BA%D8%AF%D8%A7%D8%B1-%D9%85%D9%86-%D9%85%D9%88%D9%82%D8%B9/
This week’s closing arguments laid out the clear connections between the plotters, senior Hezbollah figures, and the Assad regime, so the international community can no longer afford to look the other way.
Thirteen years after former prime minister Rafiq Hariri was assassinated by a car bomb in Beirut, the prosecution finally submitted its closing arguments in the Special Tribunal for Lebanon earlier this week, with two important disclosures. One, there is ample evidence to corroborate the link between Hezbollah’s leadership and the perpetrators of the killing, including details on their movements and communications ahead of the attack. Two, the Syrian regime was also at the core of the plot.
THE HEZBOLLAH CONNECTION
The closing arguments (released online as two PDFs, see part 1 and part 2) focused on the group’s links to the four accused, Salim Jamil Ayyash, Hassan Habib Merhi, Assad Hassan Sabra, and Hussein Hassan Oneissi. According to the prosecutor, Hezbollah secretary-general Hassan Nasrallah has repeatedly acknowledged this connection, including the fact that the covert Green Network used by the defendants was in fact part of the Hezbollah security apparatus.
Telecom data was the main evidence used to prove these links, coupled with the political context of the time and the political affiliation of the accused. In all, the prosecution examined more than 3,000 pieces of evidence and 307 witness testimonies before concluding that the February 2005 attack was executed as part of a sophisticated, multifaceted mission that could only have been the product of a conspiracy.
One of the main advances the prosecution has made is in showing how Hariri’s movements were under surveillance during and after his famous December 2004 visit to Nasrallah in the Beirut suburb of Haret Hreik—this despite the fact that neither Hariri nor his security team knew the location of the meeting beforehand. Yet this week’s most striking revelation was the reference to Hezbollah security chief Wafiq Safa, who apparently served as the group’s link with the Syrian regime. According to the prosecutor, Safa “formed part of a call flow with [senior Hezbollah military official Mustafa] Badreddine and Ayyash that immediately preceded the final preparatory activity in the early hours of the morning of the attack.” And on the eve of the assassination, Safa and Badreddine’s phones converged in the same area. In addition, Ayyash coordinated with Badreddine on conducting preoperational surveillance of Hariri and purchasing the Mitsubishi Canter van used to perpetrate the bombing.
THE SYRIAN CONNECTION
Rustum Ghazaleh, the head of Syrian military intelligence in Lebanon at the time, visited Haret Hreik often and was in regular touch with Safa, and the prosecution argued that this activity began under very specific circumstances: after the February 2005 Lebanese opposition meeting at the Bristol Hotel in Beirut, where participants demanded an end to Syria’s military occupation. The report noted that Ghazaleh’s visits and Hezbollah contacts formed part of a pattern of behavior immediately following key challenges to Syrian control in Lebanon, and immediately prior to Hariri’s assassination that same month.
“When put in context with these events,” the prosecution concluded, “the rationale and motivation behind the behavior of the networks becomes evident.” Indeed, the motives and actions of Syrian and Hezbollah officials were intimately connected at the time, and the corresponding reaction of covert networks involved in the plot reinforces the conclusion that they were operated by a single entity, coordinated by the accused and overseen by Badreddine.
NEXT STEPS
Although the final verdict is not expected for another five to six months, the revelations in the prosecutor’s closing arguments should not be taken lightly by Lebanon or the international community. If found guilty by the tribunal for killing a prime minister, Hezbollah will be regarded as a criminal organization by countries worldwide. This includes European governments, which will find it more difficult to deal with Hezbollah’s “political wing” if an international court officially determines that its parent organization carried out the assassination. In fact, such a finding should finally spur them to designate Hezbollah in its entirety as a terrorist organization rather than perpetuating the untenable “wings” approach.
Likewise, international relations with Lebanon’s state institutions will become highly problematic if Hezbollah remains part of the government. In 2004, UN Security Council Resolution 1559 called on Syria to withdraw its forces and cease interfering in Lebanon’s internal politics. Although Damascus largely complied with that requirement, the second part of the resolution—which calls on all Lebanese and non-Lebanese militias to disband—has yet to be implemented. Other long-postponed requirements were issued in Resolution 1701, which called for border demarcation between Syria and Lebanon.
Perhaps sensing potential progress on these fronts, Nasrallah warned the tribunal and its backers not to “play with fire” in an August 27 address. Whenever Hezbollah makes such threats, decisionmakers inside and outside Lebanon tend to give the group what it wants for fear of causing local instability. There are numerous examples of this appeasement, such as the electoral law that facilitated the victory of Hezbollah’s camp in this year’s parliamentary elections, or the events of May 2008, when the group used its weapons against other Lebanese citizens and wound up with a national unity government and the Doha agreement.
This time, however, the charges against Hezbollah will be coming from an international entity, and foreign governments should deal with them forthrightly rather than ducking them. The United States and other countries need not be cowed by the specter of instability—on the contrary, allowing Hezbollah to get away with Hariri’s murder would only agitate sectarian tensions, the true driver of instability across the region.
Specifically, Washington and European governments should be prepared to delay their acceptance of any new Lebanese government that includes Hezbollah figures, particularly in the security realm. They should also question Beirut about any perceived Hezbollah influence on these decisions. Prime Minister Saad Hariri needs strong, united international support to resist the group’s intimidation. To protect Lebanese state institutions, Hezbollah must be kept at a distance, and this requires close coordination.
Finally, the revelations about Syria’s role in the assassination should put an end to the notion that Bashar al-Assad can be part of his country’s political future. Even if Western and Arab governments were willing to overlook his brutal actions against his own people, there must be consequences for his regime being legally implicated in the killing of a foreign political leader.
**Hanin Ghaddar, a veteran Lebanese journalist and researcher, is the Friedmann Visiting Fellow at The Washington Institute.

The Latest LCCC Bulletin For Miscellaneous Reports And News published on
September 15-16/18
US Democrats to Palestinians: We Won’t Fight Your War”
DEBKAfile/September 15/18
A Palestinian bid to harness their case against President Donald Trump to the US Democrats’ midterm election campaign was spurned, DEBKAfile reports exclusively. “Operation Democratic Party” was launched at secret sessions led by Palestinian Authority chairman Mahmoud Abbas (Abu Mazen) at his Ramallah headquarters with military precision. These sessions took place during recent weeks, before Trump landed his final blow on Friday, Sept. 14, by shutting down the last US $10 million allocation, this one dedicated to an Israeli-Palestinian friendship program. He left in place only the part for promoting relations between Israeli Arabs and Israel Jews.
For Operation Democratic Party, Abbas had assigned Palestinian officials with individually approaching any contacts they had developed with Democratic Party big shots with a proposition to target Trump’s ill-treatment of the Palestinians in their midterm election campaigns. The list was compiled by Husam Zomlot , head of the PLO’s Washington office, Foreign Minister Riad al-Malaki and senior negotiator Saeb Erekat. Palestinian PR experts were optimistic: American public opinion was sure to rally behind the Palestinians after Trump’s outrageous treatment of the past five months, including the shutdown of the PLO consulate in Washington and the cancellation of the $450 million allocation to UNWRA. Trump’s envoys Jared Kushner and Jason Greenblatt accused the agency of perpetuating the Palestinian refugee problem and allowing it to blow up ten times more than the original figure on its watch. And, even worse, the two envoys’ recommended setting aside the Palestinian claim for a fully-independent state and offering them semi-independent status in confederation with Jordan instead.
Abbas and his advisers had no doubt that the Democrats would buy these affronts as
fodder for their campaigns against their Republican rivals. DEBKAfile’s sources report that the Palestinian lobbyists went straight to the top, making direct calls to Senate minority leader Jack Schumer, House minority leader Nancy Pelosi, former presidential candidate Bernie Sanders, Democratic senior Senator Elizabeth Warren, as well as other influential party figures, such as President Bill Clinton and associates of Secretary John Kerry. They calculated that, even if the Democratic party per se declined to make their cause a central platform issue, at least one or two high-profile figures would adopt it.
They were in for a rude shock. All the candidates came back with the same negative response. After careful consideration, the Democratic party had concluded that there was no place for the Palestinian cause in their election campaigns because it did not reverberate with the American voter as a noteworthy issue. The party would not fight Trump and the Republican party over the Palestinians, because, they said: “It is not up to us to fight your war.”Left high and dry by their last resort, the Palestinians threaten to turn to the UN, the International Criminal Court in the Hague or the Europeans, but they also realize they have run out of practical options for making up the US aid shortfall and keeping the wolf from the door in Ramallah.

Defying Dangers, Idlib Residents Protest against Assad
Asharq Al-Awsat/Saturday, 15 September, 2018/In cities and towns across Syria's last opposition-held province, Idlib, residents poured into the streets on Friday to demonstrate against Bashar Assad's regime in defiance of an expected offensive to retake the territory.
In the provincial capital, Idlib city, and in towns including Kafranbel, Dana, Azaz, Maaret al-Numan and al-Bab, demonstrators filled the streets after noon prayers and chanted against Assad, raising the tri-color green, white and black flag that has become the banner of Syria's 2011 uprising, activists said. "The rebels are our hope; Turks are our brothers; the terrorists are Bashar, Hezbollah and Russia," read a banner carried by residents in the village of Kneiset Bani Omar, referring to Turkey which backs the opposition, and Lebanon's “Hezbollah” and Russia that have joined the war along with Assad's forces. "There will be no solution in Syria without Assad's fall," read another banner carried in the northern village of Mhambel, reported The Associated Press. The demonstrations were reported on the activist-run sites Aleppo Media Center, Orient News, and other social media pages. Fridays have become the customary day for protests throughout the Arab world since the 2011 uprisings that swept through the region. Wissam Zarqa, a university teacher in Idlib, said demonstrators were flying the tri-color flag to rebut the regime line that Idlib is dominated by the al-Qaida linked Hayat Tahrir al-Sham group. The province, population 3 million, is now the final shelter for close to 1.5 million displaced Syrians that fled fighting in other parts of Syria. Many say they will not return to regime-ruled areas. Regime and Russian forces bombed towns and villages in the province earlier this week, killing more than a dozen civilians and damaging two hospitals. But the strikes eased on Wednesday amid talks between the opposition's main regional sponsor Turkey, and Russia and Turkey. Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan and his Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin are slated to meet Monday, said Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu. "We will continue our efforts with Iran and with Russia. ... (and) on international platforms as well," said Cavusoglu in comments carried live on Turkish television. Turkish media said the two leaders would meet in the Russian city of Sochi. Turkey has warned strongly against military action, saying it would trigger a humanitarian catastrophe. Its military and defense chiefs visited border areas on Friday to inspect troop reinforcements sent to its Hatay and Gaziantep provinces. Turkey has 12 military posts inside Idlib province, and activists reported on Thursday that Turkish reinforcements crossed over into Syria to fortify the installations.The United Nations said that in the first 12 days of September, over 30,000 people have been internally displaced by an intense aerial bombing campaign. Most of the displaced headed toward the border with Turkey, according to the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, packing already overcrowded camps there. The UN's World Food Program said it, alongside partners, were already delivering monthly food rations for nearly 600,000 people. It said it was prepared to deliver emergency food assistance for up to 1 million people. Save The Children said in a statement that it will continue to support extensive humanitarian programs through Syrian partner organizations in the country's northwest. It added that this includes running primary healthcare clinics and a maternity hospital, vaccination and food security programs, supporting a network of schools and carrying out child protection work. "One million children are trapped in Idlib facing what could be the greatest humanitarian catastrophe in the long and bloody history of Syria's seven-year war," said Syria Response Advocacy Manager Caroline Anning.

Time Limit of Few Weeks to Dissolve HTS in Syria’s Idlib

Moscow - Ankara - Raed Jabr and Saeed Abdelrazek/Asharq Al-Awsat/Saturday, 15 September, 2018/Pressure exerted by western countries and Turkey on Russia seems to have deferred a looming offensive by the Moscow-backed Syrian regime on the province of Idlib and allowed Ankara to dissolve Hay’at Tahrir al-Sham HTS within weeks. Turkey fears that a wide-range regime attack on Idlib, which has a population of 3 million people, could cause a new wave of exodus towards its territories. Media reports said Friday that Ankara has sent reinforcements, especially armored vehicles, to the border with Syria and to observations points it has lately established in the north of the country. Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan and his Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin will meet next Monday in Russia’s Black Sea resort of Sochi to review the situation in Idlib. "I believe an offensive, if there will be one, will not come before several weeks," a senior Turkish official told AFP, speaking on condition of anonymity. Erdogan had met with Putin and Iran’s Hassan Rouhani in Tehran on September 7 to discuss Syria and prevent regime forces from attacking Idlib. However, Erdogan and Putin failed to agree on the main strategy to solve the crisis in the province. Ankara fiercely opposes a military option in the northwest of its neighboring country. Meanwhile, UN special envoy to Syria Staffan de Mistura met Friday with the so-called "small group" of allied nations, including members from Egypt, France, Germany, Jordan, Saudi Arabia and the United Kingdom. The meeting came two days following similar talks held between the UN envoy and representatives from the there guarantor countries - Russia, Turkey and Iran. De Mistura is expected to inform the UN Security Council next Tuesday about the results of his latest talks with parties concerned with the Syrian crisis.
 
Turkey-Russia Discord over Idlib Defers Regime Offensive, for Now
Agence France Presse/Naharnet/September 15/18/Disagreement between Turkey and Russia over how to tackle the Syrian rebel stronghold of Idlib seems to have deferred a looming regime offensive on the province, analysts say. Russia and Turkey are on opposite sides of the conflict, but key global allies. Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan met Russian and Iranian leaders Vladimir Putin and Hassan Rouhani in Tehran on September 7 to discuss Syria, just as a major assault by Russia-backed regime forces on Idlib appeared imminent.
But discord at the summit between Erdogan and Putin, in a rare scene captured on camera, may have prompted Russia to postpone the Idlib strike so as not to provoke Ankara, which is fiercely opposed to a military option. "I believe an offensive, if there will be one, will not come before several weeks," a senior Turkish official told AFP, speaking on condition of anonymity. Turkey, which backs rebels fighting against President Bashar al-Assad's regime, co-sponsors -- with regime allies Russia and Iran -- the so-called Astana talks launched in January 2017 in the quest for a lasting ceasefire. To date, the dialogue has resulted in the creation of four pre-ceasefire "de-escalation zones" in Syria, including in Idlib. Idlib is the last major opposition stronghold in the war-torn country. Sixty percent of the area is controlled by the Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS) jihadist group, an al-Qaeda branch operating in Syria. Intense negotiations have taken place between Turkey and Russia since the failure of the Tehran summit, to hammer out a compromise in a bid to avert an assault which Erdogan has cautioned would ignite a "bloodbath".Such a compromise could include neutralising the HTS -- officially designated as a terror group by Ankara. Erdogan and Putin are expected to discuss the issue when they meet in the Russian resort city of Sochi on Monday.
- Compromise formula -For Turkey, the stakes are high. Ankara fears a large-scale assault on Idlib, which lies on its southern border, could trigger a massive flow of refugees onto its soil. Turkey is already home to more than three million Syrians who have fled the conflict.
Abdul Wahab Assi, an analyst at the Syria-based Jusoor Studies Centre, said disagreements at the Tehran summit "rule out a possible offensive in the short run, at least until the end of the year."He said a possible compromise from the ongoing talks could take the form of a "limited military operation or surgical strikes" targeting the HTS, or modifying the borders of the de-escalation zones to keep armed rebels from certain sectors. Russia may be open to such a plan, Assi said, as long as it would secure the Idlib section of the Aleppo-Damascus highway and put an end to drone attacks launched from Idlib against Moscow's main military base of Hmeimim in the neighbouring province of Latakia. Some three million people live in Idlib province and adjacent areas, the United Nations says, around half of whom have already fled their homes in other parts of Syria. Regime forces and Russian warplanes resumed airstrikes on Idlib in September but the strikes fell in intensity this week. Turkish 'defensive' reinforcements -Turkish media reported Ankara has sent reinforcements, including tanks, to beef up its border with Syria and its observation posts in Idlib. Turkish military analyst Metin Gurcan, judges these measures to be of a "defensive" nature, aimed at protecting Turkish observation posts against any possible threat. Gurcan said the lack of an agreement with Ankara could push Moscow, and thus the Syrian regime, to stage an "incremental operation that will last months" rather than a full-fledged attack. "Russia is trying to keep Ankara in the game," he told AFP, saying any confrontation between the two countries was "highly unlikely." "Moscow needs Turkey as a Sunni power to balance Shiite militias' presence in northern Syria," he said.

Halbousi Elected as Iraq’s Parliament Speaker
Asharq Al-Awsat/Saturday, 15 September, 2018/The Iraqi parliament elected Anbar province’s former governor Mohammed al-Halbousi as speaker on Saturday, marking the first step towards establishing the new government four months after national elections.
Parliament was due to elect a speaker and two deputies during its first meeting on Sept 3, but failed to do so as lawmakers were still trying to determine which competing bloc had the most seats. Lawmaker Ahmed al-Asadi said 169 MPs voted for Halbousi during the session and 89 voted for former defense minister Khalid al-Obeidi. Iraq's parliament contains 329 seats. Announcing the vote, the temporary leader of the assembly said Halbousi, 37, had become the youngest speaker of parliament in Iraq's history. In his first statement following his election, Halbousi vowed to hold onto the fight against terrorism. Before running in May's national elections, he was the governor of Anbar province. He had previously served in Iraq's parliament from 2014 to 2017.

Egyptian Court Orders Arrest of Mubarak's Sons in Corruption Case
Asharq Al-Awsat/Saturday, 15 September, 2018/An Egyptian criminal court ordered the arrest of ousted President Hosni Mubarak's two sons on charges of stock market manipulation, state news agency MENA reported Saturday. Alaa and Gamal Mubarak, with seven other men, are accused of violating stock market and central bank rules to make unlawful profits through dealing in shares of Al Watany Bank of Egypt. Three other men including Yasser El Mallawany and Hassan Heikal, were also arrested. All those accused in the case, which began in 2012, had been released on bail and barred from travel. Mubarak’s eldest son, Alaa, is a businessman, and Gamal is a former banker. The pair had been free since 2015. The court's next session is set for Oct. 20.

Egypt Arrests 6 'Brotherhood' Members in Foiled Alexandria Terrorist Plot
Cairo - Waleed Abdul Rahman/Asharq Al-Awsat/Saturday, 15 September, 2018/Egyptian security forces have foiled a terrorist plot by arresting six members of the "Muslim Brotherhood", which is labeled by Egypt as a terrorist organization, in the city of Alexandria, a security source said. The source explained that National Security arrested the terrorists during a raid on a housing unit where they had met to plot attacks. He pointed out that the security services confiscated a number of documents, books of the group’s leading member Sayyid Qutb and two computers. The terrorists were planning to target state institutions, aiming to create chaos in the country, added the source. Several security sources indicated that the detainees confessed they were assigned by the group’s fugitive leaders to conduct several terrorist operations. Expert on fundamentalist movements in Egypt Amr Abdel Moneim noted that terrorists were planning to create chaos in Egypt backed by the group's leaders abroad. Moneim told Asharq Al-Awsat that Brotherhood members want to send a message to the world that terrorist organizations are still operational in Egypt. He praised the preemptive measures of the security services and their efforts in uncovering terrorist plots. The Egyptian committee on terrorist funds had previously frozen the funds of a number of Brotherhood leaders, including businessmen. Sources confirmed to the committee that several of the group’s leaders and commanders are mulling new ways to manage the organization’s financial resources, including funding their armed movement. The investigations conducted with the detainees showed that they used their social media profiles to instigate against state institutions and to promote rumors and false news, the security source said. Preliminary investigations revealed that the terrorists held their meetings in a remote location in Alexandria to plot for several attacks. They face charges of belonging to an unlawful group, preventing state institutions from carrying out their duties, and engaging in incidents that disturb public security and threaten social peace.

Qatar Ends Support for Hamas Educational Institution in Gaza
Gaza /Asharq Al-Awsat/Saturday, 15 September, 2018/Qatar has stopped its support for a Gaza educational institution affiliated to the Palestinian Hamas movement. Palestinian sources told Asharq Al-Awsat that Doha had ceased its aid to Dar al-Arqam school over four months ago for reason that are yet to be revealed. Qatar has been gradually decreasing its support for the institution for less than a year and the aid came to a complete stop some four months ago. Hamas and other concerned sides attempted to garner aid through other means, but from the same source, meaning Qatar, added the sources. These attempts, however, failed. It revealed that the school was being supported by a Qatari institution that had ended all of its activities in Gaza at the end of August. Dar al-Arqam provides an education to hundreds of students who are relatives of “Palestinian martyrs.”Other sources explained that Qatar is concerned that its funding of the school could be linked to its support for terrorism.
 
Trump, Pompeo Bash Ex-Secretary of State Kerry on Iran Talks
Associated Press/Naharnet/September 15/18/Secretary of State Mike Pompeo has unloaded on his Obama-era predecessor John Kerry for "actively undermining" U.S. policy on Iran by meeting several times recently with the Iranian foreign minister, who was his main interlocutor in the Iran nuclear deal negotiations. In unusually blunt and caustic language, Pompeo said Friday that Kerry's meetings with Mohammad Javad Zarif were "unseemly and unprecedented" and "beyond inappropriate." President Donald Trump had late Thursday accused Kerry of holding "illegal meetings with the very hostile Iranian Regime, which can only serve to undercut our great work to the detriment of the American people."Pompeo said he would leave "legal determinations to others" but slammed Kerry as a former secretary of state for engaging with "the world's largest state-sponsor of terror" and telling Iran to "wait out this administration." He noted that just this week Iranian-backed militias had fired rockets at U.S. diplomatic compounds in Iraq. "You can't find precedent for this in U.S. history, and Secretary Kerry ought not to engage in that kind of behavior," an agitated Pompeo told reporters at the State Department. "It's inconsistent with what foreign policy of the United States is as directed by this president, and it is beyond inappropriate for him to be engaged." Kerry, who is promoting his new book "Every Day is Extra," tweeted a response to Trump that referred to the president's former campaign chairman, Paul Manafort, who agreed on Friday to cooperate with the special counsel's investigation into Russia interference in the 2016 presidential election and possible coordination between Russia and the Trump campaign. "Mr. President, you should be more worried about Paul Manafort meeting with Robert Mueller than me meeting with Iran's FM. But if you want to learn something about the nuclear agreement that made the world safer, buy my new book," said Kerry. He has been harshly critical of the president and his decision in May to withdraw from the Iran deal but denies "coaching" Tehran.
In a statement, his spokesman, Matt Summers, said: "There's nothing unusual, let alone unseemly or inappropriate, about former diplomats meeting with foreign counterparts. Secretary (Henry) Kissinger has done it for decades with Russia and China. What is unseemly and unprecedented is for the podium of the State Department to be hijacked for political theatrics."
Pompeo also took to task former Energy Secretary Earnest Moniz and ex-Iran deal negotiator Wendy Sherman for joining Kerry at a meeting with Zarif and other Iranian officials earlier this year at a security conference in Munich — though Sherman said Friday she wasn't with Kerry and Moniz when she met Zarif there. Along with Kerry, Moniz and Sherman played key roles in negotiating the 2015 agreement between Iran and several world powers that lifted sanctions against Tehran in exchange for restrictions on its nuclear program. "I wasn't in the meeting, but I am reasonably confident that he was not there in support of U.S. policy with respect to the Islamic Republic of Iran," Pompeo said. "Former secretaries of state — all of them, from either political party — ought not to be engaged in" this kind of activity, he said. "Actively undermining U.S. policy as a former secretary of state is literally unheard of." Meetings between a private U.S. citizen and foreign official are not against the law and not necessarily inappropriate or a violation of federal regulations, but Trump, Pompeo and several GOP lawmakers say they are evidence Kerry and former Obama administration officials are trying to subvert Trump's hard line on Iran. "John Kerry had illegal meetings with the very hostile Iranian Regime, which can only serve to undercut our great work to the detriment of the American people," Trump tweeted late Thursday. "He told them to wait out the Trump Administration! Was he registered under the Foreign Agents Registration Act? BAD!"The law Trump invoked — the Foreign Agents Registration Act, or FARA — requires registration and transparency by people or companies acting on behalf of foreign governments, political parties or individuals. But Josh Rosenstein, a partner with the Washington law firm Sandler Reiff and a specialist in lobbying compliance, said there are too many unanswered questions to know whether the law applies to Kerry's interactions with Zarif. FARA's provisions don't extend to activities conducted entirely overseas, so where Kerry interacted with him matters. Also unclear is whether any Iranians specifically asked Kerry for advice."The devil's always in the details," Rosenstein said. "Simply offering advice to a foreign government doesn't make you a foreign agent."When reports of Kerry's ex-officio contacts with Zarif first surfaced in May, Trump tweeted similar thoughts. "John Kerry can't get over the fact that he had his chance and blew it! Stay away from negotiations John, you are hurting your country!" he said on May 8. A day earlier, he tweeted: "The United States does not need John Kerry's possibly illegal Shadow Diplomacy on the very badly negotiated Iran Deal. He was the one that created this MESS in the first place!"
Trump and Pompeo's criticism came after Kerry told conservative radio host Hugh Hewitt on Wednesday that earlier reports of his meetings with Zarif were correct: They had met three or four times since Kerry left office but not since Pompeo took the job in April. One of those meetings took place in Oslo, Norway, and another in Munich, he said. A third is reported to have occurred at the United Nations headquarters, which is not technically on U.S. soil. Kerry told Hewitt that he was not coaching the Iranians on how to deal with the Trump administration. "That's not my job, and my coaching him would not, you know, that's not how it works," he said in the interview. "What I have done is tried to elicit from him (Zarif) what Iran might be willing to do in order to change the dynamic in the Middle East for the better."

Pompeo: US studying sanction waivers against entities dealing with Iran

AFP, Washington/Saturday, 15 September 2018/The United States is still studying possible waivers of sanctions against countries or businesses that continue commerce with Iran after November 4, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said on Friday. At the same time he maintained the US administration's firm position toward Tehran, which Washington accuses of interference throughout the Middle East. To the dismay of other signatories, Trump in May announced his pullout from the hard-won 2015 international accord under which Tehran agreed to limit its nuclear capacities in exchange for relief from crippling economic sanctions. Trump said the deal failed to block all paths to an Iranian nuclear bomb, and reimposed sanctions.
These included secondary penalties against businesses or foreign countries which continue commerce with Iran. Those firms must now choose between their investments in Iran and their access to the US market. Washington gave them some time to pull out, leaving the latest sanctions related to financial transactions and petroleum to take effect after November 4. "There are still a number of decisions pending before the November 4th deadline that we gotta make about waivers, potential waivers," Pompeo told a news conference. Washington wants all countries to halt oil imports from Iran before November 4 if they want to avoid US penalties. Certain waivers have not been excluded, however, notably for India which depends heavily on Iranian petroleum. Responding to a question, Pompeo said he did not know if sanctions would hit managers of Swift, the international financial messaging system, if they continue to deal with Iran. "Come November 4th, there will be a fundamentally different set of rules" regarding "anyone who deems it necessary to engage in economic activity with the Islamic Republic of Iran. It is a big important day," Pompeo said. He underlined that many countries had already begun to disengage themselves. The European Union, which continues to back the Iran nuclear accord, has tried unsuccessfully to obtain widespread waivers and many of its bigger companies have already pulled out of the country for fear of US penalties.
Iran in late August opened a lawsuit at the International Court of Justice, demanding the suspension of the renewed US financial penalties which it says are devastating its economy.

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EU to Hold Tripoli Ceasefire Violators Accountable
Khaled Mahmoud /Asharq Al-Awsat/September,15/18
The US administration and the European Union are fully supporting the Government of National Accord (GNA) in Tripoli against the 7th Brigade, one of the rival militias to accept a cease-fire truce, despite European threats to hold anyone accountable in case of violation again.
Meanwhile, France and Italy are still debating over the possibility of holding parliamentary and presidential elections before the end of this year, coinciding with the imposition of UN Security Council and US sanctions on former leader of the Petroleum Facilities Guard Ibrahim al-Jadhran. On Thursday, head of GNA Prime Minister Fayez al-Sarraj met with Charge d’Affaires for the US Department of State's Libya External Office, Donald Blome, and AFRICOM Commander Gen. Thomas Waldhauser to discuss the security situation in Tripoli and US-Libya cooperation. US officials asserted their support of efforts to achieve lasting stability in Libya through the UN Action Plan and reaffirmed support to GNA.
Discussion centered on GNA efforts to restore public security as outlined in the UN-brokered ceasefire and new measures to improve economic conditions for all Libyans through the economic reforms announced on September 12.
They commended the GNA for its response to the ISIS attack on the National Oil Corporation on September 10, and both sides agreed on the importance of close and continued engagement to ensure that sovereign state institutions are able to fulfill their mandate on behalf of all Libyans.
Meanwhile, EU issued a statement on Thursday warning that any violation of the ceasefire, such as the rocket attacks against Maitiga airport, as well as inflammatory statements that may lead to more violence, are unacceptable. Furthermore, attacks on civilians and civilian infrastructure constitute violations of international law.
“Now is the time for real change – ending predation of Libyan resources and a climate of fear and at last guaranteeing the Libyan people the basic services and individual freedoms they aspire to. The terrorist attack on 10 September against the Headquarters of the National Oil Corporation, a vital institution for the Libyan people, further highlighted the urgency for all Libyan parties to come together and overcome this spiral of violence and daily deprivation,” read the statement.
The statement asserted that EU and its Member States will remain tireless partners in building Libya’s stability through democratically elected institutions, accountable security bodies, an independent judiciary, the rule of law, and transparent management of national wealth.
“We reaffirm our strong and continued support to the United Nations action plan to advance the political process. We will also continue to support the Libyan people, in particular the most vulnerable, through humanitarian aid and development projects across Libya in partnership with Libyan authorities, UN agencies and civil society,” concluded the EU.
Meanwhile, Italian Foreign Minister Enzo Moavero Milanesi said on Wednesday his country strongly disagrees with French President Emmanuel Macron’s push for early elections in December. Media outlets reported that Milanesi told the parliamentary foreign committees that Italy disagrees with the French government, “which is still pushing for Libya to hold elections on December 10.” The set date must be “reconsidered” until conditions are in place for free, fair and peaceful elections, he continued, adding that he did not wish to “quarrel with France” and that he and his French counterpart Jean-Yves Le Drian shared “some common ground” on the Libyan crisis. The FM also announced that Italy wants to organise a conference on Libya in Sicily in the first half of November. He explained Rome wanted to set up the conference there "symbolically", in a "land that means to symbolism the hand outstretched over the Mediterranean".In other news, Libya's National Oil Corporation (NOC) welcomed on Wednesday the decision of the UN Security Council to impose sanctions on Ibrahim Jathran.
UNSC on Tuesday decided to impose sanctions on Jathran, which include travel ban and freezing of assets.


Greece: "Humanitarian Aid" Organization's People-Smuggling
Maria Polizoidou/Gatestone Institute/September 15, 2018
https://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/12960/greece-people-smuggling
Emergency Response Centre International (ERCI) describes itself as a "Greek nonprofit organization that provides emergency response and humanitarian aid in times of crisis...." It has reportedly abetted the illegal entry into Greece of 70,000 immigrants since 2015, providing the "nonprofit" with half a billion euros per year. ECRI evidently received 2,000 euros from each illegal immigrant it helped to enter Greece. In addition, its members created a business for "integrating refugees" into Greek society, granting it 5,000 euros per immigrant per year from various government programs (in education, housing and nutrition). With the government of Greece seemingly at a loss as to how to handle its refugee crisis and safeguard the security of its citizens, it is particularly dismaying to discover that the major NGO whose mandate is to provide humanitarian aid to immigrants is instead profiting from smuggling them. Migrants arrive at a beach on the Greek island of Kos after crossing part of the Aegean sea from Turkey in a rubber dinghy, on August 15, 2015. (Photo by Milos Bicanski/Getty Images)
On August 28, thirty members of the Greek NGO Emergency Response Centre International (ERCI) were arrested for their involvement in a people-smuggling network that has been operating on the island of Lesbos since 2015. According to a statement released by Greek police, as a result of the investigation that led to the arrests, "The activities of an organised criminal network that systematically facilitated the illegal entry of foreigners were fully exposed."
Among the activities uncovered were forgery, espionage and the illegal monitoring of both the Greek coastguard and the EU border agency, Frontex, for the purpose of gleaning confidential information about Turkish refugee flows. The investigation also led to the discovery of an additional six Greeks and 24 foreign nationals implicated in the case.
ERCI describes itself as:
"[A] Greek nonprofit organization that provides emergency response and humanitarian aid in times of crisis. ERCI's philosophy is to identify the gaps of humanitarian aid and step in to assist in the most efficient and impactful manner. Currently ERCI has 4 active programs working with refugees in Greece in the areas of Search and Rescue, Medical, Education and Refugee Camp Coordination."
In spite of its stated mission and non-profit profile, however, ECRI -- according to Greek authorities, has earned considerable sums of money from its serving as a conduit for illegal activities. ECRI evidently received 2,000 euros from each illegal immigrant it helped to enter Greece. In addition, its members created a business for "integrating refugees" into Greek society, granting it 5,000 euros per immigrant per year from various government programs (in education, housing and nutrition). ERCI has reportedly abetted the illegal entry into Greece of 70,000 immigrants since 2015, providing the "non-profit" with half a billion euros per year.
This revelation, however, does not begin to cover the extent of the illegal activities surrounding the entry of migrants into Greece. In 2017, for instance, Greek authorities arrested 1,399 people-smugglers, some under the cover of "humanitarian" operations; and during the first four months of 2018, authorities arrested 25,594 illegal immigrants.
More worrisome than the literally steep price paid to people-smugglers by the immigrants themselves -- or that doled out by the Greek government in the form of integration subsidies -- is the toll the situation is taking on Greek society as a whole.
According to Greek police statistics, there were 75,707 robberies and burglaries reported in 2017. Of these cases only 15,048 were solved, and 4,207 were committed by aliens. In addition, the police estimate that more than 40% of serious crimes were committed by illegal immigrants. (Legal and illegal immigrants in Greece make up 10-15% of the total population.)
In 2016, Greek prisons reportedly contained 4,246 Greeks and 5,221 foreigners convicted of serious crimes: 336 for homicide; 101 for attempted homicide; 77 for rape; and 635 for robbery. In addition, thousands of cases are still pending trial.
In a recent heart-wrenching case on August 15, a 25-year-old college student from Athens -- on a visit home from his studies at a university in Scotland -- was murdered by three illegal immigrants while he was out touring the city with a female friend from Portugal.
The three perpetrators, two Pakistanis and an Iraqi ranging in age from 17 to 28, told police that they first attacked the young woman, stealing money, credit cards, a passport and a cell phone from her purse, but when they realized that her phone was "old," they went for the young man's phone, threatening him with a knife. When he tried to fend them off, they said in their confession, they shoved him and he fell off a cliff to his death. After the interrogation, it transpired that the three killers were wanted for 10 additional robberies in the area.
In an angry letter to Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras, members of parliament and the mayor of Athens, the mother of the victim accused Tsipras of "criminal negligence" and "complicity" in her son's murder.
Instead of welcoming and providing "land and water" to every criminal and dangerous individual with savage instincts," she wrote, "should the state not think first of the safety of its own citizens, whose blood it drinks daily [economically]? [Should the state] abandon [its citizens] to ravenous gangs, for whom the worth of a human life has less meaning than the value of a cell phone or a gold chain?"
Although those were the words of a grieving mother, they are sentiments widely felt and expressed throughout Greece, where such incidents are increasingly common.
On August 29, two weeks after that murder, six immigrants in northern Greece verbally assaulted a 52-year-old man on the street, apparently for no reason. When he ignored them and kept walking, one of them stabbed him in the shoulder blade with a 24-cm (9.4-inch) knife, landing him in the hospital.
Two days earlier, on August 27, approximately 100 immigrants, protesting the living conditions in their camp in Malakasa, blocked the National Highway for more than three hours. Drivers stuck on the road said that some of the protestors went on a rampage, bashing cars with blocks of wood. To make matters worse, police on the scene said that they had not received instructions from the Ministry of Citizen Protection to clear the highway or protect the victims. Gatestone was told upon further queries, that there was no official statement from the police or the ministry, just the drivers' statements.
With the government of Greece seemingly at a loss as to how to handle its migrant crisis and safeguard the security of its citizens, it is particularly dismaying to discover that the major NGO whose mandate is to provide humanitarian aid to immigrants is instead profiting from smuggling them. The recent arrest of ERCI members underscores the need to scrutinize all such organizations.
Maria Polizoidou, a reporter, broadcast journalist, and consultant on international and foreign affairs, is based in Greece. She has a post-graduate degree in "Geopolitics and Security Issues in the Islamic complex of Turkey and Middle East" from the University of Athens.
© 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.


In Basra, is it a revolution or a disaster?
Hazem al-Amin/Al Arabiya/September 15/18
“A revolution in Basra”. Is this enough to make us, we who got bloodied by revolutions due to the extent of our attraction to them, rejoice? The revolution there is against what? Corruption? What is corrupt and who is the corrupt in Iraq? Who is the non-corrupt power that is supposed to turn the revolution into a political condition? The Arab revolutions failed, with the exception for Tunisia which had its own set of conditions that are not available in all Arab countries. The revolutions in Syria, Yemen and Libya failed. However, these revolutions had a clear opponent and their purposes were also clear. Those meant to be overthrown were regimes led by a dictator, a specific authority and corrupt relations.
In Iraq, none of these conditions seem to be prevailing. Who is the main target of this revolution then? Is it Iran, or the sectarian forces? Nothing is clear. In other words, the failure which Arab revolutions suffered from is much worse in Iraq. It is for this reason that cheering for a “revolution in Basra” is a sign of ignorance that we find ourselves being dragged to, we, the worshippers of “peoples” and who stamp revolutions with integrity while overlooking the civil wars that stand behind them.
Protestors attacked the Iranian consulate in Basra, thus it is a revolution against Iranian influence! We thus have to further cheer for the demonstrators! However, the city gave plenty of votes to Iran’s allies in the parliamentary elections which were held months ago. The demonstrators attacked security centers and government headquarters which are currently headed by Haider al-Abadi, whom Iran does not want! Then how would this be right, that the “revolution” in Basra is against Iran?
Those cheering for the “revolution” should ponder on the prospects of its success and the political dispensation that may follow it. Let us imagine that Basra’s revolution turns into a revolution in all of Iraq and overthrows the authority! Is there any political or social power that can replace the current authority? Is it outside the sectarian and national scene that is dominating Iraq and distributing the spoils to the leaders of the sects, clans and nationalities?
Those cheering for a ‘revolution in Basra’ should ponder on the prospects of its success and the political dispensation that may follow it.
The Arab revolutions succeeded in overthrowing and threatening the regimes. Even in Syria, people managed to say that they do not want this regime. The major problem is the failure of these societies and their inability to produce political powers that can carry this change and turn it into a “national” achievement. The Muslim Brotherhood was the horizon of failure in most of the countries where revolutions happened, and this horizon, despite its misery, is not even available in Iraq. The social and sectarian scene there is of a different kind, and looking for a “Shiite Brotherhood” will lead to the Dawa Party, which is in power right now. Thus it is illogical to reinstate it after rebelling against it.
In 2005 in Lebanon, we got involved in what we thought to be a revolution against the Syrian invasion. We got the Syrian army out and replaced it with Hezbollah, after the sectarian leaders took control of our “revolution”.
Taking over revolutions is easier than starting them in the civil war societies we live in. Rebelling against the corrupt and murderous authority should be preceded by a revolution against social infrastructure, which has been a partner in producing this authority.
The Dawa Party is a replacement of the Dawa Party in Iraq, just as the General People's Congress was a replacement of the General People's Congress in Yemen, or in best case Al-Islah (the Muslim Brotherhood) is the alternative. In Syria too, Islamists came on top of the scene and represented the alternative, hence, it became easier for the regime to end the revolution, and something similar happened in Egypt.
We should slow down before cheering for the “revolution in Basra”. It is not enough to hate the regime and realize the extent of its dependence and corruption in order to believe in a revolution against it. What if the conclusion of our thoughts is that the post-revolution regime will be worse or that a massive civil war will erupt? Iraq needs to take major steps that must precede the revolution as this is the way to prevent the revolution from turning into a disaster.

Yemen peace talks: Houthis setting conditions on a plane staircase
Amal Abdulaziz Al–Hazani/Al Arabiya/September 15/18
In August, United Nations envoy to Yemen Martin Griffiths announced to the world and the Security Council that consultations between the legitimate Yemeni government and the putschists would be held in the first week of September in Geneva to pave the way for a political solution and end the armed conflict that has been ongoing since 2014. This was considered good news and the UN envoy believed that it was the beginning of a success story for his mission, as a representative of the international community between the conflicting parties in Yemen.
Houthis did not turn up
The delegation representing legitimacy in Yemen arrived in Geneva along with the representatives of the permanent members of the Security Council and the representatives of 19 countries sponsoring the Gulf initiative, along with Martin Griffiths who launched this initiative. Everyone was there but the Houthis — the second party, as they were a no show. Griffiths tried until the very last minute to contact the Houthis and persuade their delegation to come to Geneva, but in vain. This is the fourth time that consultations are being held between the two sides after Geneva 1, Geneva 2 in 2015 and Kuwait in 2016.
The Houthis had given their word to the UN envoy that they were ready to hold consultations. Griffiths was clear that no party would set its own conditions during the consultations, and that each delegation would come to consult without any preconditions, not even a cease-fire on the basis of a temporary truce. That was the agreement and Griffiths was impatiently looking forward to September. Unfortunately, the round of consultations failed because of the absence of the Houthi party which justified its absence with conditions that it made in the last hours.
Houthis gave their word to the UN envoy that they were ready to hold consultations, but they did not turn up
These conditions were not made in August but they came as a chance which the Houthis thought is suitable to apply pressure on the UN envoy and embarrass him to press the delegation of the legitimate government to accept conditions like not inspecting their aircraft and allowing them to use the aircraft for medical evacuation of their wounded members to and from the Sultanate of Oman. They also made repeated attempt to request the presence of a Saudi and UAE delegation during the consultations.
In the beginning they said that the coalition in support of legitimacy did not issue a permit for the plane that would take them to Geneva. It soon turned out to be a lie and that the authorization was made at the request of the United Nations. After that they put forward their conditions which they knew in advance would not be accepted in terms of time and subject matter. So why did the Houthis deliberately sabotage the Geneva talks? Why did they attend the two sessions of Switzerland and the Kuwait talks which lasted 100 days, but did not attend this session?
Iran sanctions: The hidden factor
In fact, the problem of Yemen can be understood in the context of the regional situation. The most important development in the past several months in the region has been the turbulent situation in Iran, which is the result of the re-imposition of US sanctions on it. It is an earthquake which has consequences, of which the most important is influencing Iranian activities in the region especially in Syria, Lebanon and Yemen. The spokesman for the coalition forces in support the legitimacy, Colonel Turki al-Malki said that the Houthis are tools in the hands of Iran.
This statement confirmed what is known as the Houthi Ansar Allah militia takes orders from Qassim Soleimani, who has appointed himself a representative of the Iranian regime in the Arab region. Every action taken by the Houthis is an order from Tehran, including what happened at the recent Geneva consultations which Tehran deliberately thwarted as a sign that it controls the security of the region and to remind everyone that its armed agents are on standby waiting for its orders, whatever the international pressure on it or on its armed groups are and irrespective of any economic restrictions on it.
Those blaming Griffiths for not holding the Houthis accountable for breaking their promise to attend the Geneva talks do not realize the difficulty of his mission in finding a common ground with the Houthis. Griffiths tried diplomatically not to lose any party, as such he was resentful because of the absence of the Houthis, but he showed his resentment secretly to the delegation of legitimacy.
However, in front of the international media he was calm, and he was drawing a plan with the Houthis so that the initiative does not collapse. This reaction may be unsatisfactory to the legitimacy delegation that attended and waited, but in reality it is the only reaction that will enable the international envoy to return to the stage where he stopped with the Houthis. As a matter of fact, he already announced his intention to go to Sanaa and Oman to talk to them.
From another angle, the point that the United Nations and its international envoy must understand is that the Houthis cannot make any decisions, as whether they like it or not as they are an Iranian card that has not been burnt yet and the more the US puts pressure on Iran, as is the case right now, the more it will sharpen its claws against the countries where it has a foothold.
Therefore, any progress or regression made by Griffiths is related to the situation of Iran which will suffer a lot in about a month and a half from now when US sanctions on energy trade will be enforced. Although everyone is saying and hoping that the solution in Yemen will be political rather than military, the reality is that the military operational progress of the Yemeni army forces on the ground are the only aspects facing the authority of Tehran over the Houthis.
 
Tripoli and Idlib: A question of strategies and possibilities
Radwan al-Sayed/Al Arabiya/September 15/18
In recent years, I have been repeating a statement made by late Saudi Foreign Minister Prince Saud al-Faisal in 2010 that the Arab world faces a “strategic vacuum” and that nature refuses such a state of emptiness. Prince Al-Faisal has predicted an increase in foreign interferences in Arab countries. At the time, there were complaints of the Hamas statelet in Gaza which the Iranians and the Assad regime founded, of Egypt's dispute with Ethiopia over the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam and Eritrea's assaults on Yemeni islands.
Since nature is averse to emptiness, many regional, international and terrorist organizations have seized the opportunity of the chaos in the year of 2011, so they increased their interferences, seized countries and deployed their militias in other countries to spread chaos. The international forces have returned under the pretext of fighting terrorism! All these facts are well known, and can be found in the news and researches. There are countries which have surrendered to Iranian militias, such as Lebanon, and countries like Iraq which are still trying to fight back and restore the state. Nevertheless, the most painful examples of ongoing calamities with no hope in the horizon are Libya and Syria.
Libyan crisis
The terrible thing about what happened in Libya is that international forces which have intervened in the unrest from the very beginning have legislated what they considered a solution that keeps the capital Tripoli under the control of the militias or rather most of western Libya as several “armies” still sit comfortably draining the country's resources and enjoying the protection of the National Accord system and of its presidential council and government which was invented by international forces. The international powers have hijacked this great "accord" to the point that they wanted to hold elections later this year. However, one or two militias felt that their share of land and money are too small compared to their capabilities and greatness, so they clashed, as usual, among each other, killing civilians and destroying several neighborhoods.
If the situation in Tripoli and western Libya is terrible, it is actually much worse in Syria. For many years, Syria has been divided between international parties (Russia, the United States, France and Britain), regional ones (Iran and Turkey), and Assad's soldiers and sectarian militias. Since 2015, Russia’s air force has intervened to help Assad, built huge bases and committed horrific massacres.
The Idlib disaster
When the Russians were subjugating the disobedient areas, the regime's forces and Iran’s militias would come in and take control over the land and forcibly displace people to Idlib, where the number of refugees and displaced people is far greater than the resident population. Now it is Idlib’s turn to be crushed on the pretext that there are al-Qaeda terrorists there. The Russians, the Iranians and the Turks are meeting in Tehran to finalize the issue of annihilating the city! Meanwhile the Americans and some Europeans are cautioning against a humanitarian crisis. As for the international envoy, he ended up “trying to come up with something new” saying that he and international humanitarian organizations are ready to secure a safe passage for those who want to escape! Who are the people who can escape? Are they the ones who have been displaced from Aleppo, Homs, Daraa, Qalamun and other places! Where will they go? Their only option is to head to the Turkish border and Turkey already has 3.5 million displaced Syrians, so will it agree to receive another million? No one believes that if Idlib is burned, the war in Syria would end. There are areas in the east of the Euphrates, in the hands of the Kurds and their American guardians. There are Turkish border areas, under Erdogan's control, and as such the conflict in Syria appears to be never-ending.
Strategic vacuum
Those who invaded Syria cannot be the protectors of its peace and unity, but Arabs have been absent for years, so their only way to exercise any influence is through international powers, that is the Russians and the Americans, and of course not through the Iranians who "discovered" in Syria more than 8,000 Al-Bayt shrines and have to stay to protect them from extremists! Turkey, too, cannot be relied on after Erdogan discovered the bones of the Ottomon royal family in a cemetery in Aleppo. He also discovered that the Kurds were threatening Turkey on its border with Syria!
Things are very different in Libya. Eastern Libya has its elected national parliament and most of the national army. Thanks to the army, the Libyan east is almost free of terrorism, after it wiped out chaos. The solution in Libya is feasible and its pillar is Arab support of the Libyan national army and the parliament. As for the international forces, they are not concerned with the militias, but with the dispute between France and Italy! The only way to get rid of this "strategic vacuum" is through intervention of Arab decision-making, as they have intervened in Yemen, and by practicing influence in turmoil-hit regions.

World’s Post-Lehman Legacy
Brian Chappatta/Bloomberg View/September 15/18
In many ways, all the talk about global central banks beginning a “great unwind” of their extraordinary monetary stimulus is positively quaint.
After all, how can officials from the Federal Reserve to the Bank of Japan even pretend to know how to reverse what they’ve done over the past decade? I’m speaking specifically about propping up financial markets with easy money and allowing the world’s debt burden to balloon to almost $250 trillion.
They kept interest rates at or below zero for an extended period — probably too long, if they’re being honest with themselves — and used bond-buying programs to further suppress sovereign yields, punishing savers and promoting consumption and risk-taking. Global debt has ballooned over the past two decades: from $84 trillion at the turn of the century, to $173 trillion at the time of the 2008 financial crisis, to $250 trillion a decade after Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc.’s collapse.
Governments are largely responsible for the borrowing binge, with their debt growing not just nominally but as a percentage of global GDP as well.
Not everyone is piling up debt. Thanks to post-crisis regulations, financial corporations have become healthier and more resilient to another shock. Over the past decade, they’ve increased their debt by just $3 trillion, leaving their debt-to-GDP ratio as low as it has been in recent memory.
But other companies have picked up the slack, taking advantage of rock-bottom interest rates to take on increasingly high amounts of leverage to boost profits. They used to have less debt than financial corporations. Some $27 trillion of borrowing later, the obligations are almost as large as the world’s GDP.
Households across the globe appear to be in a similar position as they were 10 years ago. As a percentage of GDP, the debt has barely changed. But it depends where you look. In nominal terms, household debt is down in developed markets like the Germany, Japan and the UK. In China, on the other hand, households have accumulated $6.5 trillion of debt, up from $757 billion in 2008.
Now, 10 years after the collapse of Lehman Brothers, we’re seeing the results of the grandest central-bank experiment in history. On the surface, it looks like mission accomplished. In the US, the unemployment rate is near a 48-year low, the S&P 500 Index recently reached another all-time high and consumers are about as confident as they’ve been this millennium. But dig a little deeper, and you’ll find that this road has been paved with debt, debt and more debt — and that it’s a one-way street.
Let’s start with the $15.3 trillion US Treasury market, the world’s biggest bond market. Remarkably, it has tripled in size since August 2008. For context, in the prior 10-year period, it grew by “only” $1.5 trillion, even amid the beginning of the Iraq War. The totality of US federal debt now makes up more than 100 percent of America’s gross domestic product.
Meanwhile, American households have been deleveraging, with their debt as a percentage of GDP reaching the lowest level since 2002. US financial corporations have slashed their leverage as well, while other companies have brought their borrowing back up to levels last seen amid the heights of the crisis.
This isn’t a uniquely American problem. Across the globe, government debt has soared over the past decade, both in nominal amount and as a percentage of GDP. While individuals and financial institutions have been busy getting their houses in order after the crisis, many large governments leaned on their captive buyer base — central banks — to binge on debt and pull forward economic growth.
The fact that central banks suppressed interest rates also encouraged nonfinancial companies to tap the bond markets early and often. Across the world, their debt load now represents more than 90 percent of GDP, up from about 77 percent in 2008, according to data from the Institute of International Finance. Sometimes those proceeds were put to productive uses, but often the corporations merely purchased their own shares, boosting the stock value.
Now, this isn’t solely a developed-market story, either. Emerging-market debt levels are much higher than they were 10 years ago, with yield-starved investors clamoring for dollar-denominated debt from places like Turkey and Brazil. Of course, those nations are now coming under pressure as the Fed raises interest rates, boosting the dollar and making it more costly for companies in those countries to repay their obligations. Across all emerging nations, nonfinancial corporate debt represents almost 100 percent of their GDP.
But it’s worth noting that China’s debt levels have exploded in the post-Lehman era. China is now saddled with almost $40 trillion of debt, compared with less than $30 trillion for all other emerging markets combined. In 2008, the group had $16 trillion of debt, while China only carried $7 trillion. The world’s second-largest economy is now coming to terms with rising corporate defaults.
No one knows for sure whether the leverage across the financial system is sustainable — only that it’s different from 2008. Back then, some individuals overextended themselves by taking on mortgages they had little hope of repaying. This time, companies are pushing the envelope as far as they can, accepting weaker credit ratings in an effort to maximize profits. This is the post-Lehman legacy. To pull the global economy back from the brink, governments borrowed heavily from the future. That either portends pain ahead, through austerity measures or tax increases, or it signals that central-bank meddling will become a permanent fixture of 21st century financial markets.