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Rouhani and the 1914 remix

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By Pepe Escobar 

Iranian President Hassan Rouhani is at the moment the hardest-working man in (geopolitical) show business. He has just stepped into the lion's den - or goldfish bowl; the World Economic Forum at Davos. And he charmed them all just with his "prudent moderation" strategy, which broadcasts what every Master of The Universe, real or fake, really wants to hear; Iran is open for business. 

Rouhani stressed what even BRIC-inventor Jim O'Neill has acknowledged; Iran has the potential to become one of the world's Top Ten economies before 2040. His strategy to achieve it is extremely sound; a very balanced foreign policy subordinated to boosting economic development. It starts with a definitive deal with the P5+1 - the permanent members of the United Nations Security Council plus Germany - until the end of 2014; the lifting of all sanctions; and then a steady flow of investment by the West. 

Rouhani does not see any "insurmountable hurdles" towards a permanent, comprehensive nuclear deal - "unless other parties don't show enough serious will". Sanctions, he said, "merely exacerbate" instability, rather than create peace. 

Rouhani could not be more measured in his push to "engage with the world community in a fair basis". He re-stressed that Iran's nuclear program is for civilian use only: "We have no ambition to create a nuclear weapon ... I strongly declare that nuclear weapons have no place in our security strategy. But Iranian people are not prepared to give up their peaceful technology. We will continue to develop peaceful nuclear use." 

That's why, when asked about dual-use of nuclear technology, he said, "Forty countries have dual-use of nuclear technology. Iran will not accept being discriminated against." 

Rouhani stressed how Iran is building stronger trade links with its neighbors - the long list includes Russia, Turkey and Pakistan - and wants nothing but to normalize business with the Europeans. So he duly courted Western business leaders. He talked to Western Big Oil in a "framework of mutual interests". And what a deal is potentially on the table: if you invest in our energy industry - and they are all salivating to do so - we will help your economic growth, and that's good for world peace. 

He said the financial crisis proved nations can't lock themselves away. He even paid a compliment to the theme of the Davos talkfest this year: successful economies must also be ethical. Tell that to JP Morgan's Jamie Dimon. 

According to Rouhani, "The last six years have taught us that no country can succeed alone ... No country can regard its dominance as permanent. And we are all linked through globalization. If we do not choose wise captains then the storm will claim us all." Tell that to the strident clique who won't spare any effort to bomb any possibility of an entente with Iran. 

His position on Syria was, once again, sound. "Ruthless killers are flooding into Syria, and fight - even fight each other ... We should all work together to help Syria, and push these killers out of Syria. Then we must get the opposition around the table, and organize full and fair elections in Syria." Tell that to the House of Saud and Qatar's House of Thani. 

The 1914 gang

Just because Rouhani declined to include Israel among all the countries Iran is building closer ties with - he talked about peace with "all countries ... that we have officially recognized" - the usual Israel lobby shills started throwing a fit. Tehran does not have to recognize a rabid Tel Aviv regime that has been, for years, routinely threatening to attack, with or without the US in the forefront. By the way, those sterling democrats at the House of Saud also do not formally recognize Israel. But they are "our" bastards. 

This all necessarily had to merge with one of the key obsessions at Davos this year - the idea that it's 1914 all over again. Davos, for starters, is not exactly prescient; it took them years to finally admit that wealth inequality and unemployment are mortal threats to the global economy. CEOs with fat bonuses are not exactly egalitarians, only when it's bad for business. 

As wealth inequality goes, this Oxfam report released on Monday tells is like it is: "The bottom half of the world's population owns the same as the richest 85 people in the world." 

Another report released on Monday by the International Labor Organization (ILO) shows that unemployment, on a global level, has touched no fewer than 202 million people in 2013; and there will be 215 million by 2018. Unemployment is growing in Southeast Asia, South Asia, and on a smaller scale the Middle East, Northern Africa and Central Europe. Not to mention youth unemployment galloping ahead in Southern Europe - Greece, Spain, Italy - as well as Ireland. 

And guess who the ILO deems responsible? The Masters of the Universe gathering in Davos; corporations preferred to keep their cash or buy their own stocks rather than invest in production capacity or to create jobs. 

It was mostly up to Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe to stoke the 1914 remix fire - with his China-demonization shtick that "military expansion" in Asia could run out of control. (SeeCowbells, or how Davos saves the world, Asia Times Online, January 23, 2014.) 

But it's economist Nouriel Roubini who's been the 1914 remix point man. OK, just as a century ago, wealth inequality is high (now provoked by the shady dealings of the turbo-capitalism embraced by most Masters of the Universe). We're at a "gilded age of inequality" (Roubini). And there's obviously a widespread backlash against globalization - as in unlimited corporate profits out of the marketization of everything. 

As for "rising geopolitical tensions", no one at Davos seems to have the balls to name where they come from; the decline of the American Empire with all is centrifugal and centripetal convulsions; the fear of many in the West and especially Japan in the East of an unstoppable, rising China; and the unholy alliance of Israel and the House of Saud to keep the wider Middle East mired in sectarian conflict. These are the real "geopolitical tensions" that could revamp 1914; not Iran, China or Russia's foreign policy strategies. 

Pepe Escobar is the author of Globalistan: How the Globalized World is Dissolving into Liquid War (Nimble Books, 2007), Red Zone Blues: a snapshot of Baghdad during the surge (Nimble Books, 2007), and Obama does Globalistan (Nimble Books, 2009).

He may be reached at pepeasia@yahoo.com.
 

(Copyright 2014 Asia Times Online (Holdings) Ltd. All rights reserved. Please contact us about sales, syndication and republishing.) 

Maaloula Nun Captors Seek Release of All Islamist Prisoners in Roumieh

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A picture shows Mar Takla Greek Orthodox monastery in the Syrian Christian town of Maalula on September 7, 2013. (Photo: AFP - STR).
Published Monday, January 27, 2014
As negotiations were underway to release the Maaloula nuns held in a palace in the Damascus countryside, their kidnappers raised impossible demands, taking the case back to square one.
Informed sources told Al-Akhbar that ongoing negotiations to procure the release of the Maaloula nuns kidnapped by al-Nusra Front and held in the Syrian city of Yabroud close to the Lebanese border have been deadlocked since December 6. The sources also pointed to an unwelcome development regarding the fate of one of the two bishops, Yohanna Ibrahim and Boulos Yazigi, who were kidnapped in Aleppo about eight months ago.
The sources pointed out that a non-Syrian official in the group holding the nuns had expressed a desire to quickly resolve this issue before another official from the same group stepped in, slowing the process and making additional demands.
The sources said three parties are working to reach an agreement with the kidnappers. The first and most serious party is a global organization that has strong influence in Syria these days. The second party is a coordinating group that includes Lebanon, Qatar, and Turkey. The last party is a Syrian businessman who has strong ties to Syrian president Bashar al-Assad but also wields influence on the ground in Yabroud.
The sources said that Syrian authorities informed church officials in and outside Syria of their willingness to facilitate the mediators’ task. They expressed, however, reservations about cooperation with Qatar and Turkey, even though they did not mind if the Lebanese General Directorate of General Security Abbas Ibrahim continued his contacts with security officials in Turkey, Qatar and Saudi Arabia to resolve this issue.
According to these sources, the Syrian businessman is George Haswani from Yabroud. He wields some influence in Yabroud and was able, in cooperation with the elders of the city, to spare it harsh confrontations with the Syrian army on a number of occasions. He mediated with the kidnappers’ leader, who informed him that they had to transfer the nuns from Maaloula to Yabroud after they received information that the Syrian army was planning to bomb Maaloula, kill the nuns, and then accuse his group of killing them.
Haswani conveyed to the captors guarantees that the Syrian leadership would not take any action that would endanger the nuns’ lives. After negotiations, the militants agreed to move the nuns to one of the palaces owned by Haswani, who tacitly agreed to give the armed group permission to manage the security situation in and around his palace. He also managed to have at least one mediator and the Greek Orthodox Patriarch of Antioch John X Yazigi talk on the phone with one of the nuns.
The sources revealed that the demands put forward during the first phase of negotiations focused mainly on receiving ransom money. At this point, the Qataris volunteered to pay to secure the success of the deal. They wanted the nuns transferred to Lebanon where they would welcome them alongside church and Lebanese officials.
Prisoner Exchange Stalemate
Suddenly, the kidnappers raised their demands to include an exchange of Islamist prisoners being held in Lebanon, Syria and Iraq, in accordance with the nationalities of the nuns.
The group, which includes members linked to the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS) and al-Nusra Front, is demanding that the Iraqi government release dozens of ISIS members detained by Iraqi authorities. In Syria, the kidnappers demanded the release of more than a thousand detainees, many affiliated with hardline Islamist groups.
A high-level security source told Al-Akhbar that the kidnappers also demanded the release of all Islamist prisoners in Lebanon’s Roumieh prison. Their list included Saudis, Tunisians, Libyans, Palestinians and Syrians who were detained during the 2007 Nahr al-Bared battle with the Lebanese army and in connection with the February 21, 2007 bombing of two civilian buses that killed three people in the town of Ain Alak in Northern Metn.
While the mediator told the kidnappers that these demands were unfeasible, the Iraqi and Lebanese governments decided, separately, that they would not enter this bazaar. This allowed Haswani to focus on releasing detainees from Syrian prisons. He told the mediators that the Syrian leadership is ready to facilitate this task to the maximum degree. He emphasized, however, that Damascus does not approve of transferring released detainees outside Syrian territories, but rather gives them the right to choose.
As an example, the Syrian authorities refer to the story of the Syrian female prisoners who were released in return for the Lebanese pilgrims kidnapped in Azaz, Syria. Damascus refused at the time to transfer them to a Qatari plane meant to fly them to Turkey. They instead insisted on delaying the decision of their release to a later time. When they were finally released, the Syrian authorities facilitated the efforts led by General Abbas Ibrahim and head of Qatari intelligence Ahmed bin Nasser bin Jassim who sent a delegation to the Masnaa border crossing between Lebanon and Syria to interview the released detainees, all of whom refused to leave Syria.
The Two Kidnapped Bishops

Informed sources revealed that the two kidnapped bishops are not held in the same location as the nuns, nor are they being held by the same group. The sources explained that an armed group was able to capture one of the bishops from his previous captors and move him to its headquarters in the Aleppo countryside.
According to sources, negotiations had led to an agreement to hand over the bishop to a mediator on Lebanese territory. But battlefield developments complicated the mission, as it became difficult for the captors to secure a safe route from the place of detention to the Lebanese border. This obstacle was finally overcome by agreeing to hand over the bishop to a mediator in a Syrian region that is not controlled by opposition armed groups. The sources declined to talk about the kidnappers’ demands.
The church was informed that the bishops’ captors held the bishops in two separate locations. The sources denied having any proof that one of the bishops had died, and denied their knowledge of the identity of the kidnapping group.
(Al-Akhbar)
This article is an edited translation from the Arabic Edition.

Israeli Soldier Injured as Bomb Explodes near Southern Town of Adaisseh

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Al-Manar Website correspondent reported that an Israeli soldier was injured on Monday near the barbed fence of the southern town of Adaisseh.
The correspondent said that the occupation soldier was injured during a digging work.

He added that the injured soldier was working in a trench dug by the enemy forces last month, noting that other details related to the explosion have yet to be known.
Adaisseh bomb explosion

Adaisseh bomb explosion

Source: Al-Manar Website
27-01-2014 - 10:22 Last updated 27-01-2014 - 10:22 |



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Israel demolishes four Palestinian homes in Jersualem

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A Palestinian woman from the Idriss family is comforted by a relative as they watch Israeli diggers demolish their house, deemed illegal by Jerusalem municipal authorities, on January 27, 2014 in the east Jerusalem neighborhood of Beit Hanina. (Photo: AFP - Ahmad Gharabli)
Published Monday, January 27, 2014
Israeli authorities on Monday demolished four Palestinian homes in annexed east Jerusalem that had been built without construction permits, police and residents said.
A total of 20 people lived in the four buildings, two of them located in the Issawiya neighborhood and two in Beit Hanina, occupants told AFP.
They had been served demolition orders because they did not have the necessary construction permits, police spokeswoman Luba Samri told AFP.
In 2013, Israel destroyed 99 buildings in annexed east Jerusalem, leaving 298 people homeless, according to United Nations humanitarian affairs agency OCHA.
Palestinians and human rights groups in the city say Israel rarely grants the permits, forcing residents to build homes without them.
Israel defines the whole of Jerusalem as its "eternal and indivisible" capital.
Israeli municipality workers use mechanical diggers to demolish a house belonging to a Palestinian family in the Arab east Jerusalem neighborhood of Beit Hanina on January 27, 2014. (Photo: AFP - Ahmad Gharabli)
(AFP)

Orient Tendencies: The Syrian State Has Won the First Round in Geneva II

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Posted on January 27, 2014 by Alexandra Valiente

http://www.neworientnews.com/news/files/news/geneva_pic_1-20140127-083122.jpg
Orient Tendencies
Monday January 27, 2014, no168
Weekly information and analysis bulletin specialized in Arab Middle Eastern affairs prepared by neworientnews.com
Editor in chief Wassim Raad
wassimraad73@gmail.com
New Orient Center for Strategic policies

The Syrian State Has Won the First Round in Geneva II

By Ghaleb Kandil
The Geneva Conference 2 showed strongly the sovereign and independent position and attitude  of the Syrian state and its determination to seriously find a political solution to the crisis through dialogue with the opposition. However, the opposition presented a crestfallen face and continued, with the enemies of Syria, the campaign of lies to intensify pressure on this resistant state. 
Geneva 2 has identified a series of data, which included the Syrian state strength and credibility, which are illustrated in the following facts: 
-The firm determination to protect the independence and sovereignty, refusing any precondition and focusing on the will of the Syrian people, the ultimate authority of constitutional and political reference. An even greater determination to face any attempt of foreign intervention in Syrian sovereign affairs. 
-The choice of inter-Syrian dialogue, even if the opposition delegation suffers from a serious lack of representativeness and is manipulated by the alliance that is waging a war against Syria, led by the United States.
-The strong commitment to the priority of the battle against terrorism, subtly integrated into the concept of stopping the violence, consecrated by the initiative of Kofi Annan, sabotaged by the United States. 
-The presentation of the Syrian state vision of the transitional period, which should be the culmination of the dialogue in the shadow of the current Constitution and not a coup through a transitional governing council, as defended by the Secretary of State, John Kerry and Hillary Clinton before him, according to their interpretation of the Geneva 1 understanding. An understanding that is the subject of conflicting views between Moscow and Washington. 
In addition to all these elements, the delegation of the Syrian state has emerged as a cohesive team, skilfully managing the media, political and diplomatic battle, focusing the interests of journalists in Montreux. The Syrian delegation gave a brilliant image of the Syrian state, consistent and confident in its supremacy. 
The United States, as usual, released a lot of lies in order to increase pressure on the Syrian state, trying to impose a definite reading of Geneva 1, backed by many Western media. In fact, Geneva 1 nowhere mentions namely President Bashar al-Assad, and does not expect the formation of a supra-constitutional transitional instance. This means that such a body, if it were born, could be constitutional only if it is formed by a decree signed by President Assad and if its members take an oath before the head of state. 
Statements of John Kerry and François Hollande on the role of President Assad are not in accordance with the provisions of Geneva 1. And indecency has reached such heights that at the same time, U.S., British and French authorities, circulate information on contacts made with the Syrian authorities on cooperation in the fight against terrorism. Unscrupulously, Kerry sent one of his assistants to the newsroom of Montreux to declare to journalists known for their friendships with the Syrian state, that the United States are aware of the changes in the balance of power imposed the Syrian Arab Army, and to confirm the Syrian-American contacts. This schizophrenia was probed by journalists in Switzerland during the coverage of the conference. 
The Government of Qatar, and behind it the U.S. intelligence, invented a big lie in an attempt to influence the climate of the conference, through the so-called report on torture and executions in the Syrian prisons. Western journalists and experts have noticed the many flaws and failures in this document and its unexpected timing for the opposition and the enemies of Syria. Some stressed ironically that countries like Qatar and Saudi Arabia, which does not even have a Constitution, present themselves as defenders of human rights facing a civil and secular state, fought by extremist-Takfirists groups, funded by these two backward countries. 
Another incongruity of the conference, the fact that the U.S. ambassador to Damascus, Robert Ford, appeared as the true president of the Syrian National Coalition delegation (SNC).
Likely that the conference will end with the three propositions given in Moscow by the Minister Walid Moallem: an exchange of prisoners; security arrangements, which would start in Aleppo-the SNC wants them to start in Homs; the delivery of humanitarian aid. 
Another date may then be decided after the settlement of the two mistakes which the Russian Foreign Minister, Sergei Lavrov, has promised to fix: the exclusion of Iran and the expansion of the representativeness of the opposition delegation  by including other groups that have been excluded. 
The Syrian national state won a major round and the battle continues. It is the Syrian Arab Army which will have the major role in the coming period. 
__________________________________________________________
Statements
Saad Hariri, Future Movement Leader
«We’re trying to run the country with everyone, because we do not want to keep anyone outside. Lebanon is having a difficult time, especially since the international community has failed miserably to do anything for Syria. I think it is our duty toward the people of Lebanon to stabilize the country … I am very optimistic. We know that they are allegedly persons who committed these crimes … But at the end of the day, this is a political party that has a big coalition, with Aounis. Eventually I will return to Lebanon. There is a security problem in Lebanon, especially as you know the assassination of Mohammad Shatah the year before, and Wissam al-Hassan the year before that. I don’t want to go back and end up like the others. I want to go back and play my role as I should.»
Michel Aoun, Free Patriotic Movement leader
«We can make sacrifices but not at the expense of the people we represent and we can make concessions without eliminating … our presence and role. While we reject the principle of having a single sect or party permanently occupying any ministerial post, rotation [of ministerial portfolios] is permissible [only after] a new parliamentary era and in the framework of an actual equality. I am still working toward the formation of a national unity government and I am glad with a formula that represents everyone. We accepted the 8-8-8 formula despite the injustice concerning the number of ministerial posts allocated to our bloc. We cannot waiver on proper Christian representation either in terms of the ministerial portfolios, the number of the posts and their nature whether they are … primary or secondary. We cannot give up on the right of each party naming its representatives in the Cabinet because that party should be held accountable to its voters. We think that the prospective government can establish a new phase of dialogue and understandings with the aim of securing stability instead of strife that is threatening Lebanon’s existence. We think that the government will pave the way for the presidential election, which should be held on time and bring a strong president who is a true representation of Christians.»
Adnane Mansour, Caretaker Foreign Minister
«I will never retract these statements regardless of the campaigns against me, after all we live in a democratic country and there are different points of view… and we will choose the road we deem appropriate. I had informed President Michel Suleiman of the content of my speech before I left, but I added a passage during the conference because the Lebanese people, who sacrificed many martyrs, cannot be called terrorists.»
Samir Geagea, Lebanese Forces leader
«The country cannot be left without a government, which must be an actual, harmonious one, and these conditions can only be attained at the moment through a neutral government. I am convinced that as long as Hezbollah remains in its current position, we will not be able to improve the country, things will rather become worse. The 14-Mars is wrong if he thinks he can make a difference by participating in the new government. We agreed in the coalition on the fact that participation in government without political change we would be fatal. We do not want to participate in government without prior guarantees and later worked as wish some of our comrades, to develop the ministerial declaration on the basis of principles to which we are all committed. Hezbollah has made concessions only in form. The formula of 8-8-8 offers no solution since it seems that the party will try to have a say in the choice of a minister close to the president and another close to the Prime Minister, which will increase its share to ten ministers and not eight.»
Samir el-Jisr, Future bloc MP
«Those present at the meeting believe that failure to deal with the security incident that sparked the recent clashes, and failure to contain the matter by pursuing and arresting the perpetrators, is what allowed the return of sniper operations. The lack of a security presence in all areas of the city has allowed for waves of theft. Stability begins with protective security, which can identify threats and deal with them before they happen. The return of stability begins with the active presence and deployment of security forces.»
___________________________________________________________
Events
  • A resident from the northern city of Tripoli pledged allegiance in a YouTube video to the Al-Qaeda-linked Islamic State of Iraq and al-Sham. “After the flag of Islam expanded from Iraq to Al-Sham [Syria]… we have decided to pledge allegiance to [ISIS]… from Tripoli, so it would become a door, God willing, [to pass] from Lebanon to [Jerusalem],” Abou Sayyaf al-Ansari said in a video broadcast Saturday on YouTube. “We pledge allegiance to the [chief] of believers, [ISIS leader] Abou Bakr al-Husseini al-Qoreishi al-Baghdadi,” the extremist added. “We have proposed to them to recruit units in Lebanon in order to continue the path of Jihad,” Ansari explained in his YouTube address. Ansari also slammed the Lebanese Armed Forces, and called on Sunnis in the army to leave it. “We have awoken from our sleep… because the nation’s pillars are being cracked by Lebanon’s Crusader army [the LAF] supported by [Hezbollah]. On another hand, the Al-Nusra Front in Lebanon issued a statement along with the Abdullah Azzam Brigades claiming responsibility for the rocket strike on the Beqaa town of Hermel, adding that they would continue to target Hezbollah until their demands are met. “The Marwan Hadid Brigades adherent to the Abdullah Azzam Brigades as well as the Al-Nusra Front in Lebanon [claim responsibility for] the bombing of Hermel with seven Grad rockets, [an attack] which achieved its goals,” a statement issued on Twitter said.
  • Thirteen nuns abducted by Syrian rebels from their convent in the town of Maaloula last month are “well” as negotiations continue for their release, Syrian Patriarch John Yazigi told reporters on Saturday. Rebels kidnapped the nuns on December 3 from their convent in the Mar Thecla Monastery of the historic Christian town Maaloula and taken to the nearby village of Yabroud. “They are believed to be at a residence in Yabroud, and they are well,” the cleric was quoted as saying by Lebanon’s National News Agency from Beirut’s international airport ahead of a visit to Moscow. “Negotiations are still ongoing,” he added. “We hope for their quick release along with the bishops, for they carry a message of peace in the service of others,” Yazigi said, referring to two bishops kidnapped in Syria last April. The 13 nuns were kidnapped along with three civilians a day after rebels overran their village.
  • Nearly 50 people were killed in weekend clashes that erupted during rival rallies marking the anniversary of Egypt’s 2011 that toppled Hosni Mubarak, the health ministry said Sunday. Three years after Egyptians rose up to demand the overthrow of Mubarak, thousands of demonstrators in Cairo’s Tahrir Square on Saturday chanted slogans backing another military man, General Abdel Fattah al-Sisi, as police clashed with Islamists and activists elsewhere. Forty-nine people were killed, the ministry said, in 24 hours of fighting across Egypt as police and supporters of the military-installed government clashed with Islamist backers of president Mohamed Morsi, who was deposed in July after a single turbulent year in power. Egypt was already on edge after four bombs exploded in Cairo on Friday, including a massive blast outside police headquarters. The attacks, which were claimed by a Sinai-based extremist group, killed six people. Ansar Beit al-Maqdis, an Al-Qaeda-inspired group, claimed Friday’s bombings, all of which targeted police, and urged “Muslims” to stay away from police buildings.
    ___________________________________________________________
Press review
As Safir (Lebanese daily, Arab nationalist)
Imad Marmal(January 24, 2014)
Whence comes the surprising flexibility of Hezbollah, the Future Movement and Amal Movement on the government issue, which led the parties to make reciprocal concessions that allowed to consider a unifying government. An expert explains that these concessions are not due solely to an internal consideration. They reflect foremost regional and international upheavals that local actors could not ignore.
These changes involve Russia, the United States, Iran and Saudi Arabia. The U.S. Ambassador David Hale said during a visit to Tammam Salam: “If you form a neutral government, we do not oppose it. But it would be preferable that you form a government in which Hezbollah would be represented.” European ambassadors have called to share the prime minister-designate to form as soon as a unifying government , assuring that they would be at his side.
An Nahar (Lebanese daily, close to March-14 Coalition)
(January 25, 2014)
“The alternative to forming a cabinet according to the 8-8-8 formula is a fait accompli or neutral cabinet, which is the best choice for March 14,” Berri was quoted by his visitors as saying.
“I fear the opportunity to form a unity government will not be seized,” he said.
Berri also voiced his readiness to make efforts again concerning this issue when he is certain that “parties are willing to be flexible in order to reach an understanding and overcome obstacles.”
Lebanon’s political parties are attempting to form a new government that would bring together the rival March 14 and March 8 alliances. 
Future Movement leader MP Saad Hariri, whose party is the main pillar of the pro-Western March 14 coalition, stated earlier in the week that he is putting aside his personal differences with Hezbollah, in an effort to form a national-partnership cabinet that can safeguard the country.
Meanwhile, the Free Patriotic Movement has rejected the proposed rotation of the ministerial portfolios, and caretaker Energy Minister Gebran Bassil has voiced his insistence on the party maintaining control over the Energy and Telecom Ministries.
Al Akhbar (Lebanese Daily close to the Lebanese Resistance)
Radwan Mortada (January 25, 2014)
On January 24, online jihadi forums affiliated with the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS) were promoting a recorded speech by ISIS leader Abu Sayyaf al-Ansari, in which he will declare the expansion of the Islamic State into Lebanon. The speech will be posted today on ISIS’ official Twitter page at an as yet undisclosed time.
Meanwhile, Lebanon’s branch of al-Nusra Front posted on its Twitter feed its fourth official statement to date, titled “Urgent appeal to Sunnis in Lebanon.” The statement declared, “Iran’s party [i.e. Hezbollah] and all its bases and […] strongholds are a legitimate target for us wherever they may be found.” Al-Nusra, based on its “concern for the blood of the Sunnis and to clear one’s conscience before God,” called on Sunnis in Lebanon to “refrain from approaching or residing in [Hezbollah] areas or near its bases,” and to “avoid its gathering places and posts.”
The jihadi factions are racing to declare war on Lebanon. This takes place in parallel with rapid security developments, in tandem with the Lebanese army crackdown on individuals suspected of involvement with al-Qaeda-affiliated groups. But what implications does al-Nusra Front’s fourth statement carry? And will there be anything new in the speech of ISIS leader Ansari?
Speaking to Al-Akhbar via Skype, a jihadi leader active in the Damascus countryside gave a preview of Ansari’s speech. He said, “Our war will no longer be confined to Syria. Soon, Lebanon will ignite.”
He continued, “The time intervals seen between the five bombings that hit Beirut’s southern suburb will shrink, and the pace of martyrdom [suicide] attacks against Hezbollah targets will accelerate.” The jihadi leader then said, “Things won’t stop at the time intervals between attacks, and their scope will also expand.”
“The amount of explosives used will also be doubled,” he added.
According to reports, Ansari is an al-Qaeda commander in Lebanon. His speech might be timed to take place in parallel with terrorist attacks.
The security services are tracking down jihadi movements between Lebanon and Syria. Security sources told Al-Akhbar that Saudi suspects were crossing through the border town of Ersal to fight in Syria, but did not confirm reports that the Saudis intend to return to Lebanon to carry out suicide attacks here.
The security services did not conceal their concerns regarding the possible use of so-called inghimasi fighters by the jihadis in their attacks. The inghimasi – from Arabic inghimas, plunging into, as in enemy ranks – is a type of suicide attacker who engages in guerilla warfare and does not activate his or her suicide belt except as a last resort.
In other words, the security services fear terrorist attacks against commercial centers or residential areas in specific regions, to cause the greatest number of casualties and cause a much bigger frenzy in the media than suicide attacks would do. In this regard, Al-Akhbar has obtained exclusive information revealing that advanced surveillance cameras were installed at a number of critical buildings nearly a week ago, while existing cameras have been replaced with more sophisticated ones to monitor suspicious movements.
Al Akhbar (January 25, 2014)
Maysam Rizk and Usama al-Qaderi
It seems as if takfiris have managed to put the Future Movement and Hezbollah in the same boat. Future’s officials are now worried about a backlash led by extremists against their “moderate” movement. But in this new battle, the Future Movement lacks a leader; its chief Saad Hariri has been absent for years, living in Paris.
Would Hariri’s “opening” toward Hezbollah put both parties in the same boat against takfiris? For some in the Future Movement, this is quite plausible, mainly after statements and videos that were circulated in Tripoli, lambasting Hariri’s agreement to join a government alongside Hezbollah.
In these statements, Hariri was accused of “selling his own religion and waiving the blood of martyrs so he can reach power.” He was also warned from ever “returning to Lebanon.”
To add oil to fire, Saida’s fugitive Sheikh Ahmad al-Assir announced via Twitter, “Making concessions before an aggressor and a murderer and accepting to take part in an inclusive cabinet after the assassination of former minister Mohammed Shatah is a defeat and a surrender.”
“These threats are very serious,” said Future Movement sources, who revealed that many officials “are taking precautionary security measures because these statements are considered direct threats to their lives.”
They believe that the coming attacks won’t be restricted to Dahiyeh and Hezbollah strongholds. There is a plausible chance that Tariq al-Jdideh and other regions dominated by Hariri sympathizers would also be targeted. “What Dahiyeh is witnessing today due to Hezbollah’s intervention in Syria, may also affect us because we insist on moderation in the face of extremism,” the sources said.
Future officials don’t seem concerned about statements coming from Tripoli, as much as they fear “turbulent acts due to Assir’s reckless behavior, similar to what happened in Abra.”
These threats prompted some officials within the Future Movement to criticize Hariri’s positions, as the policy adopted in the last couple of years had favored extremism over moderation “and Assir managed somehow to occupy a certain space within Future Movement sympathizers.”
According to critics, the main issue here is that “Hariri still believes that Tripoli and Beirut would be at his beck and call when he returns from his exile in Paris, and he doesn’t quite understand the changes at the political level and on the ground.”
They called Hariri to “recalculate his positions in virtue of the changes among Sunnis after the revolution in Syria, amid a lack of funding and services provided by Hariri.”
These Future officials hope Hariri will successfully take advantage of the extremists’ outrage. They believe the Future Movement “can reveal extremists’ animosity toward everyone, mainly amid the violence they spread all over the country.” However, they stress, “Hariri should also set a line separating concessions from his image as a moderate Sunni leader who is working to spare Lebanon a major explosion.”
Hariri’s TV appearances and tweets are not enough. “The plan he seeks to initiate to counter takfiris cannot be launched from Paris but should be launched from Koraytem.”
“He made us a matter of ridicule,” said a Future Movement hawk. Hariri is “crushing the Sunni sect and surrendering in front of the force of arms.” They recalled his previous solid positions, saying that once “he got cornered, he was ready to waive.”
One official close to the Future Movement said, “The problem is not just convincing our allies about Hariri’s new positions. We are also facing a big problem in convincing our own people about his decision to join a government with Hezbollah.”
According to the source, divergent positions between the base and the command led to tension within the movement. The leadership has been away for about two years and the Future Movement’s central command now realizes its big dilemma.Recently, orders have been given to local officials, mainly in the Bekaa, to restore political activities “but with a new momentum, after the Bekaa command failed on many previous occasions.”
However, a prominent Bekaa figure held the central command responsible, saying, “They told us to wait and watch because the public cannot hear or see over the bullets.” According to him, this has made Assir a prominent figure today.
Following Hariri’s declaration to join a government with Hezbollah, leading extremists in Sunni towns in the Bekaa attempted to mobilize locals. They said, “The Future Movement doesn’t represent Sunnis but only seeks its own interests” and questioned Hariri’s loyalty to his sect.
They said the Future Movement repeatedly makes concessions “for a few ministerial seats.” In the town of Kamed al-Lawz, a local sheikh took advantage of a funeral attended by many mourners to criticize the Future Movement, saying that the Hariri family “shamed us all.”
Al Akhbar (January 24, 2014)
Ghassan Saoud
The views expressed by Lebanese Future Movement leader MP Saad Hariri in a recent TV interview reinforced among many the belief that the political accord over forming a coalition government is the culmination of regional accords. The theme of these accords – counterterrorism – will be the main if not the only item on the manifesto of Tammam Salam’s government.
The militants in the North Lebanon city of Tripoli are furious. They have been told that the Ministry of Health, since the beginning of 2014, has stopped covering their medical bills in the city’s hospitals. They are also furious because of the roughness the army showed in the last confrontation.
During that confrontation, the army, perhaps for the first time, responded violently to the source of fire, targeting the so-called “alleyway commanders” of the militants directly. The army even tried to bring in tanks to Bab al-Tabbaneh, before it named the suspects accused of assaulting its soldiers in an official statement, in what may be a hint for other security services to arrest them rather than continuing to give them cover.
At the same time, the militants in Tripoli have been informed that army intelligence chief for North Lebanon, Gen. Amer al-Hassan, during a security meeting at Prime Minister Najib Mikati’s home to discuss the new round of violence, had a markedly different attitude. Hassan voiced sharp criticisms against some of those present, and made threats against the militants.
Add to this the militants’ major disillusionment with Saad Hariri, after the latter gave a green light to security services to crackdown on anyone disturbing the peace in the city. Then there’s the fact that retired General Ashraf Rifi could not be reached for the past two days, ever since Rifi called on the supporters of the “Cedar Revolution” to reassess the current stage, in a message posted on the Lebanese Forces website.
The militants are two kinds: Salafis and non-Salafis. The city had been expecting a battle between the army and the first kind, but the most recent round was with the non-Salafis.
It is in this latter category that alleyway commanders like Abu Khalil al-Hallaq and Abu Jamal al-Nhaili can be classed. They operate behind the cemetery in Bab al-Tabbaneh, in a street commonly known in Tripoli as Captain Street. There are rumors in the city that Nhaili was behind the viral video that contained threats to Hariri recently. These two commanders, like most militants operating on the front lines with Jabal Mohsen, count themselves as supporters of General Rifi.
Three years ago, the alleyway fighters did not number more than 200, and their job was to fire their weapons from the balconies of their homes at buildings in Jabal Mohsen. Not one of them was a “full-time” fighter. Today, there is a “squadron” of militants in almost every alleyway, led by what best resembles an emir, or commander.
Loyalties in the alleyways overlap. The Zahra family fighters, who are active in Bab al-Tabbaneh, are loyal to Rifi, too, and so is Emad al-Riz and many others who receive backing and encouragement from the former chief of the Internal Security Forces.
Others, like Saad Masri, who was involved in the latest round of fighting, have mixed loyalties for both Rifi and Prime Minister Mikati. Surreally, Mikati admitted in the last meeting at his home to lending financial support to Masri, but said, “I wasn’t the one who bought him a gun worth more than $60,000. I don’t know where they got all this!”
Talal Issa, another militant commander operating near Tripoli’s bazaar, also has overlapping loyalties to both Rifi and Mikati. Ziad Allouki is affiliated with Rifi, but he also makes room for the wishes of Mikati and the Karami family, as they both command considerable support in his turf.
In the district of Mankoubine, commanders like Tawfiq al-Shaar (Abu Mustafa) are closer to Mikati than to others. The consensus is that Mikat is like “Santa Claus,” he gives without return, especially since the militants cannot vote due to criminal convictions.
In truth, Mikati did nothing more than use money, instead of the powers of his office, to buy these militants off. While this is bad, others have done worse things. Others have created, trained, and armed the comprehensive – though chaotic – paramilitary structure that exists today in Tripoli.
In private meetings, MP Walid Jumblatt has said that his attacks against the Information Branch followed this security agency’s collusion with what he called “the madness in Tripoli.” The Information Branch was headed by Chaim Araji, until Rifi suspected the latter was collaborating with Mikati, and replaced him with Mohammed Arab, an officer fully loyal to Rifi.
It follows from the above that the non-Salafi militants are not a real danger. Indeed, if the Future Movement decides in earnest to de-escalate, then Rifi can pacify them just as fast as he can mobilize them. But if there is no decision to de-escalate, then Rifi will not order them to stand down, and the army will not seriously crack down on them. The farce of the past three years will just continue.
Instead, the real battle, in the event a decision is made to “cleanse” Tripoli, would take place between the army and the takfiri elements in the Salafi camp. In the last round of fighting, this faction stayed put, and did not fire a single bullet. We are not talking here about Salafi clerics like Bilal Duqmaq, Dai al-Islam al-Shahhal, and Omar Fustuq – who don’t have a single fighter – but about four or five groups led by people like Ali Hajar, Hussam al-Sabbagh, and Firas al-Ali.
Throughout the past few days, these extremist groups restrained themselves, because, according to one activist in their ranks, they knew they would be scapegoated in the current regional political bazaar. The reason for their restraint is their fear that the army might be looking for a pretext to repeat in Tripoli what happened in Abra with the supporters of Salafi cleric Ahmad al-Assir.
For years, these Salafi militants have strapped explosive belts around their waists, but they do not have access to the kind of funding or advanced weaponry as their comrades in the “alleyway squadrons.” In fact, most of them are merchants and shop owners from the city.
In various discussions with them, one comes out with a strong impression that they are extremely cautious folk. So much so that they have been stringently disciplining anyone in their ranks who dares raise the banners of al-Nusra Front or other organizations designated as terror groups worldwide. Meanwhile, three specific issues dominate their calculations:
One, the presidential elections around the corner. This stirs bitter memories for them, since it was the Nahr al-Bared conflict (in their view) that had paved the way for General Michel Suleiman to Baabda. Similarly, the battle of Abra helped secure an extension of army commander Jean Kahwaji’s term, as they say.
Two, Saad Hariri is seeking to mend his image before the international community, as a moderate anti-terror figure, and as collaboration with Islamists has turned from an element of strength to an element of suspicion and censure.
A former Tripoli MP said Hariri refused to sacrifice his Islamist allies before, but that today, the impetus for this is regional and there is no room for sharing power with the Islamists. At the same time, Hariri would benefit from not being directly in power to keep his distance from any potential consequences for the liquidation of yesterday’s allies.
Three, there is a 180-degree shift in the Shia attitude. Seven years ago, the Shia political forces tried to draw red lines over the storming of Nahr al-Bared, but now, the Shia forces have an unrivaled enthusiasm for cracking down on extremists and destroying their nurturing environment.
There might never be a battle between the army and the extremists, which could allow the latter to expand and attract “alleyway commanders” to their side.
But if it does take place, the battle would probably see eight or nine fronts similar to the Abra front simultaneously, in addition to dozens of secondary skirmishes in other neighborhoods. This would be a bigger and more violent battle than Nahr al-Bared, given the population density and the near impossibility of evacuating non-combatants, according to one security source.
But ultimately, according to a minister in the caretaker government, success in such a battle depends on not having any foreign elements, like Palestinian factions, Syrian factions, or al-Qaeda, entering the fray. He cites the high number of Syrian refugees in the city, and the relative ease at which hundreds of them could be recruited to fight.
Al Akhbar (January 22, 2014)
Sami Kleib
Geneva II is a surreal conference, not much different than the surrealism of the top artists who once lived in the magnificent city of Montreux, Switzerland. The official Syrian delegation heads to the conference to assert the regime’s legitimacy in the fight against terror, only to discover that Saudi and international traps have been laid for it and its ally Iran. The opposition delegation heads to Montreux seeking to delegitimize the regime, only to find out that an international plot has been hatched to end its role and lay the foundations of a more representative opposition framework for future negotiations.
Ultimately, the photo-op will be the most important outcome, with a picture of the regime and the opposition sitting around the same table.
Tremendous US pressure was brought to bear to persuade the coalition to attend. As a result, the coalition splintered, and those within the opposition grouping who agreed to attend were an unlikely alliance of pro-Saudi elements, the Muslim Brotherhood, and Michel Kilo’s faction. Some have jokingly called Kilo, the former communist, “our sheikh,” since he went to Riyadh and failed to object to the implementation of Sharia and attacked the Muslim Brotherhood and Qatar. Opposition sources say that Prince Bandar bin Sultan, the Saudi spy chief, met with Kilo twice, the first time for eight hours after he dispatched his private jet to bring him from Istanbul to Jeddah, and the second for four hours.
US Ambassador Robert Ford explicitly told the opposition: Agree on whomever you want however you want, but you must attend. Indeed, Washington hopes to achieve something before the end of Barack Obama’s second term, but also before Ford’s mission ends.
But there had to be a price, that came on a golden platter. The UN came out with the “present” when Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon withdrew his invitation to Iran to attend Geneva II. This happened under pressure from Saudi and France, according to what is being said in Geneva. This belief is reinforced by reports that Russia and Washington had both agreed to invite Iran.
Iran’s name was even put on the conference table. Suddenly, the invitation was rescinded. It was a big slap in the face to the international organizations. But that’s OK; slaps will not be in short supply in Montreux and Geneva.
The second surprise came from Greece. It was soon revealed that Greece’s detention of the Syrian delegation’s plane was the result of European pressures on Athens. Between the surprises of Iran and Greece, a report was leaked on what has been described as systematic crimes by the regime against detainees. All this is meant to weaken the position of the regime and embarrass it ahead of the international conference.
Some said that withdrawing the invitation relieves Iran. Iran would be free in not accepting any of the conference’s outcomes. In effect, Iran paved the way for this with official statements on January 21.
Ban Ki-moon and international envoy Lakhdar Brahimi tried to persuade Tehran to consent to the principles of the Geneva I communique before attending Geneva II. Tehran dug in its heels. So did Russia, and Bashar al-Assad before them both. There can be no discussions whatsoever about the powers of the president or about transferring these powers to a transitional government. This is a red line for Damascus, and will remain a red line, even if it causes Geneva II to implode.
Does Geneva II pave the way for the elimination of the opposition coalition? This is a distinct possibility. Russian officials have candidly told opposition figures from outside the coalition: Don’t bank too much on the first episode of Geneva; there is more to come. Some suspect that Moscow and Washington have agreed to let the first stage pass in any way possible, with Russian pledges to expand the opposition framework in the coming phase.
There is another view holding that the hard core of the Friends of Syria group, which comprises 11 countries, has decided that the opposition’s delegation to Geneva II should be malleable so as to forestall any dissent. One figure in the opposition from outside the coalition went as far as saying, “We no longer trust anything. It seems that the Americans and the Russians have decided to refloat the regime. They want to show the opposition as fragmented to make it easier to support the regime against terror in the next phase. Everything else is rhetoric.”
The residents of Montreux are oblivious to what is happening in their city. Sitting in their homes, they see the delegations coming to disturb the calm in the city that lies between the mountains, opposite a marvelous lake.
Between Montreux and Geneva, there are tunnels that go beneath the mighty Alps. Whenever a visitor exits a tunnel, he will see the fir, cypress, and pine trees standing tall under what is left of the last snowstorm. And whenever a visitor leaves a tunnel, he will glimpse the sunlight, shyly peering from behind the clouds. By contrast, the participants in Geneva II don’t know where the negotiations’ tunnel will lead.
Are regional and international conditions ripe for a settlement? Or will there be more blood, fire, bombings, and destruction at the end of the tunnel, before a deal can be reached? From the counterattack against Assad, Iran, Hezbollah, Iraq, and the Houthis in Yemen, it appears that the battle is still very much raging.
The conference participants envy the people of Montreux for the splendor of the place. Here, the people have only seen the scenes of carnage on television, or not at all. The music and art festivals are much more appealing to them than the delegations that came to negotiate, without being convinced about the worth of these negotiations to begin with.
The Daily Star (Lebanese daily close to the March-14 coalition)
Hussein Dakroub (January 25, 2014)
Prime Minister-designate Tammam Salam intends to form a fait accompli government after intensive efforts failed to resolve the row over the rotation of key ministerial portfolios in a national unity Cabinet, political sources said Friday.
However, the sources said behind-the-scene contacts were still ongoing in a last-ditch attempt to reach an agreement over such a Cabinet based on an 8-8-8 lineup.
Hezbollah, meanwhile, warned against attempts to exclude MP Michel Aoun’s Free Patrotic Movement from the new Cabinet.
“If an agreement is not reached in the next couple of days over the proposed 8-8-8 Cabinet lineup, Salam is poised to form a fait accompli government, most likely a nonpartisan government,” a senior political source told The Daily Star.
The source said there was “a slim chance” the ongoing consultations between Salam and the Hezbollah-led March 8 coalition would soften Aoun’s stance on rotating key ministerial portfolios.
Aoun opposes the idea of a ministerial rotation, which is upheld by Salam and backed by President Michel Sleiman, because it will deprive him of two key portfolios: the Energy Ministry currently held by his son-in-law, Gebran Bassil, and the Telecommunications Ministry held by Nicolas Sehnaoui, who also belongs to the FPM.
Aoun has demanded that Bassil retain the Energy Ministry in the new Cabinet, in addition to another sovereign ministerial portfolio to be allotted to his bloc.
Salam, who has adopted the principle of the rotation of ministerial portfolios among parties and sects since he was appointed prime minister-designate in April, has strongly rejected Aoun’s demand.
Aoun’s stance has stymied mediation efforts on the Cabinet formation exerted mainly by Hezbollah, caretaker Health Minister Ali Hasan Khalil from Speaker Nabih Berri’s parliamentary bloc, and caretaker Social Affairs Minister Wael Abu Faour, who belongs to MP Walid Jumblatt’s centrist bloc.
Abu Faour met Salam Friday in the latest bid to end the rift over the rotation of ministerial portfolios. Hussein Khalil, a political aide to Hezbollah leader Sayyed Hasan Nasrallah, also met Salam for the same purpose Thursday.
A source close to Salam said consultations to overcome the last remaining hurdle posed by Aoun’s rejection of a ministerial rotation were still ongoing.
But FPM sources denied that any negotiations were being held to clinch a deal over a national unity Cabinet.
Because the negotiations have reached a dead end, the sources said they expected the new Cabinet decrees to be issued by the president would give Aoun a considerable share of ministerial portfolios as promised by Sleiman and Salam.
The sources said they could not predict how Aoun’s allies, namely Berri, Hezbollah, the Marada Movement and the Tashnag Party, would react if the FPM leader decided to withdraw his ministers from the new Cabinet.
Berri, Hezbollah and March 8 politicians have repeatedly warned Sleiman and Salam of the dire consequences of forming a fait accompli government – their term for a neutral or nonpartisan Cabinet – on the country’s security and stability, already threatened by the repercussions of the war in Syria.
Salam was reported to have given the March 8 coalition a Sunday deadline to accept his proposed 8-8-8 Cabinet lineup, or else he would form a fait accompli government.
MP Mohammad Raad, head of Hezbollah’s parliamentary bloc, warned against attempts to exclude Aoun’s bloc from the new Cabinet. He also warned against forming a fait accompli government.
“We must not rush matters in the Cabinet formation. Excluding a major component from the Cabinet at this stage, especially since it attains a heavy representation for the Christians, will cast doubts about the constitutionality of the Cabinet,” Raad told a memorial ceremony in the southern town of Ghaziyeh, in a clear reference to Aoun’s parliamentary Change and Reform bloc. “Therefore, we must give ourselves a chance to exert sincere efforts in order to accommodate everyone [in the Cabinet] and reach agreement with everyone,” he said. “We don’t want a neutral, illusive government. We see no benefit from a so-called fait accompli government,” Raad said. “We stress the need for an all-embracing political government because we feel the danger of disintegration awaiting us at the hands of terrorists and takfiris,” he added.
AFP (France-Press Agency, January 25, 2014)
Anyone travelling from the UK to Syria faces arrest on their return, a senior police chief warned Saturday, fearing they pose a terror threat to Britain.
Manchester’s police chief Peter Fahy, who leads the Association of Chief Police Officers’ “Prevent” counter-terror strategy, said there was a “huge concern” about people travelling to Syria to fight in its civil war.
Sixteen people have been arrested on suspicion of terror offences this month after returning from Syria, compared with 24 in the whole of last year, the BBC reported.
Syria “is an incredibly dangerous place and you will be arrested and stopped at the border if you try and come back,” Fahy told BBC radio.
“We’ve stopped quite a number of people because we’re very, very clear about what will happen.”
A defector from the hardline Islamic State of Iraq and al-Sham warned this week that Al-Qaeda was training hundreds of British people fighting in Syria to become jihadists and urging them to carry out attacks when they return home.
The defector, known as Murad, told The Daily Telegraph newspaper that other recruits from Europe and the United States were also being trained to make car bombs before being sent home to form terror cells.
Fahy said there was “a real worry about those who may be radicalized, who may have been engaged in terrorist training.
“If people are engaging in terrorism or planning terrorism or fundraising for terrorism then that is clearly against the law,” he added.
Fahy said the police were concerned about the welfare of young people who have travelled to Syria and said they could be put on special programs.
He said police would work with youth organizations and schools “essentially to make sure these people haven’t been affected and try and make sure they’re not a threat to this country.”
The “Prevent” strategy provides practical help to stop people from being drawn towards terror and provides advice and support.
Britain’s intelligence services estimate that around 500 British fighters are currently in Syria.
The Times newspaper said Saturday that security screening at airports has been increased, with the focus on people flying in from Istanbul, a staging point on the route into Syria across the Turkish border. Two British women were on Wednesday charged with raising money suspected of funding terrorism in Syria, Scotland Yard police headquarters announced.
Two British men were charged last week with travelling to Syria for terror purposes, while another man was arrested on suspicion of attending a terror camp in the war-ravaged country.
CNN.com (American TV website, January 24, 2014)
By Kapil Komireddi
“The French, British and Americans have no understanding of what’s happening here,” a foreign diplomat posted in Syria told me in the summer of 2012. At the time it was still possible for an outsider like me, having recently arrived in Syria from London, to imagine Bashar al-Assad’s imminent departure. Even a U.S. State Department official had dismissed his regime as “a dead man walking.”
But non-Westerners who had spent years in Syria were less hopeful. They rejected reports in the American press prophesying the demise of the government. Al-Assad, they said, was popular among the minorities. Besides, the army’s loyalty to him was near-absolute.
Today, Bashar al-Assad is more powerful than he was 15 months ago. For all the predictions of his impending overthrow, his Baathist machine remains the only stable feature in Syria. Despite the carnage, daily life in Damascus, al-Assad’s bastion, largely continues as before. There have been no major defections, and most importantly the Syrian Arab Army, despite suffering more than 30,000 fatalities, continues to pledge its allegiance to al-Assad. In the past two months, it has reclaimed from the opposition territory outside Damascus.
Yet, instead of recalibrating its response, Washington remains tethered to its same narrow policy goal: al-Assad’s removal from power. John Kerry devoted his speech Wednesday in Switzerland, where representatives of the Syrian government and some opposition groups have assembled to hold peace talks, to reiterating this demand. This is an unrealistic expectation. Far from achieving al-Assad’s exit, it will prolong the violence. Syrian government representatives did not go to the negotiating table to throw away his gains. The so-called Geneva Communiqué that forms the basis of Kerry’s demand does not in fact call for Assad’s removal.
And he is unlikely to budge without a credible threat of force from the United States.
Kerry claimed this week that such a threat was still “on the table”. In truth, Washington’s options are severely limited by the embarrassing fact that the opposition that has come to Switzerland to wrest power from al-Assad does not have a significant constituency in Syria. Its members hold little sway over the mujahideen fighting government forces.
Much of the territory outside the government’s control is held by groups linked to al Qaeda, and al Qaeda is opposed to the peace talks. It is aware that it could emerge as the unintended beneficiary of any Western attempt to dislodge al-Assad.
Even the “moderate” elements of the opposition appear to be beyond Washington’s control. The peace talks in Switzerland were deemed crucial by Washington. Yet members of the opposition repeatedly threatened to derail them if their demand to exclude Iran from the process was not met. Kerry had been attempting for weeks to get a seat for Tehran at the talks because he grasped that, as a regional power that has abetted Syria in its civil war, Iran’s presence was vital to progress. This irked Saudi Arabia, the Sunni theocracy that is alarmed by the thaw in relations between Tehran and Washington.
Saudi Arabia’s intervention in Syria has always been part of its effort to blunt Iran’s influence and cripple what it sees is a Shia corridor of power in the Middle East. As the principal backer of the opposition, Saudi Arabia has played a key role in transforming Syria into a haven for foreign jihadists cut from the same ideological cloth as the men who carried out the 9/11 attacks. Iran hurt its own interests by refusing to adhere to preconditions, which in Tehran’s view bound it to an unfavorable outcome — a Saudi-backed transitional government — even before the talks had begun. But its abrupt exclusion from the peace talks is a triumph of Saudi policy.
All of this explains why al-Assad, despite having presided over the slaughter of so many Syrians, was able to ridicule the negotiations as a “joke”.” His decision to dispatch a delegation to participate in them was in deference to his sponsors in Russia who, having labored hard to halt the threat of a U.S. military strike against their client last year, are eager to demonstrate the utility of diplomacy. Sergei Lavrov, the Russian foreign minister, was quick to cast the opening day as a success. “For the first time in three years,” he said, “the sides — for all their accusations — agreed to sit down at the negotiating table.”
But the framework for the negotiations already looks obsolete. Hammered out in 2012 by Kofi Annan, then the U.N. peace envoy to Syria, its terms — calling for a transitional governing body by mutual consent of all parties, a national dialogue, free elections, and a comprehensive review of the constitution — hark back to a time when al-Assad seemed weak, the opposition was unified, and the phrase “Arab Spring” could be spoken hopefully in the West. The major powers that helped forge the Geneva Communiqué, perhaps anticipating al-Assad’s fall, refused to place their weight behind it when it mattered. Annan quit his job in frustration.
To ordinary Syrians, the ongoing talks in Switzerland look like a meaningless sideshow. Al-Assad, feeling triumphant, refuses to go. An internally riven opposition refuses to temper its demands. The West, unwilling to intervene militarily and incapable yet of forcing change diplomatically, watches with impotent rage. Al Qaeda, once enfeebled, looks on expectantly.
Syria is now a homicidal theater for a proxy war between Saudi Arabia and Iran — the Middle East’s Sunni and Shia powers. A dialogue between the two may do more to halt the fighting in Syria than negotiations between Assad and his Syrian adversaries operating from abroad. Washington’s energies are better spent in nudging the two rivals in that direction.
More immediately, the United States’ ambition should be to end the violence. Rather than push for al-Assad’s departure, it should work toward obtaining a pragmatic power-sharing deal centered on reconciliation rather than regime change. Finally, it should press its allies in Saudi Arabia and Qatar to drop their support for radical Islamists. If not, the flames that are now devouring Syria may soon engulf the West.

Egypt's military implores Sisi to run for president

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Published Monday, January 27, 2014
Updated 8:34 pm: Egypt's top military council said on Monday its commander Abdel Fattah al-Sisi should heed calls to stand in a presidential election.
The Supreme Council of the Armed Forces said in a statement "the people's trust in Sisi is a call that must be heeded as the free choice of the people."
The statement said Sisi had thanked the military leadership for allowing him "the right to respond to the call of duty."
Sisi, the general behind the ouster in July of Egypt's first democratically elected president, the Islamist Mohamed Mursi, would have to give up his military uniform to stand for election.
The presidential election is set to take place by mid-April, and will be followed by a parliamentary poll to restore democratic government by 2015, according to a new constitution.
The council earlier on Monday gave Sisi the green light to run for the presidency.
Sisi, who will resign from the army to stand for office, is tipped to easily win a presidential election due to be held by mid-April, with no serious rivals.
Sisi was promoted to the rank of field marshal, the highest in the military, Monday morning by the military-installed presidency.
"Interim president Adly Mansour issued a presidential decree promoting General Abdel Fattah al-Sisi, minister of defense, to the rank of field marshal," said the statement.
(AFP, Reuters)

Long Odds to Save Their Country: The Syrian Team in Geneva

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By FRANKLIN LAMB

As we begin a new week here in Damascus, many citizens, across a fairly broad spectrum, appear to be backing, and even exhibiting a kind of pride for, their diplomatic team at the Geneva II conference. It might sound flippant for this observer to suggest that returning to Damascus, after recent events in his neighborhood of Haret Hriek in Dahiyeh, South Beirut, sort of feels like arriving at last in a relatively peaceful, stress-free locale. But others have described the crossover from Lebanon in similar terms. Damascus is currently more quiet and ‘normal’ appearing than I have found it for more than two years.

It appears that Damascenes, to a person, despite differing political views, are hoping for breakthroughs that just might bring an end to the carnage that has left virtually no one untouched in a conflict that has driven 9.5 million people from their homes, killed close to 140,000, and has resulted in more than 18,000 being missing. It is a major humanitarian crisis in the birthplace of civilization, and it has been felt both within Syria and among its neighbors.

At the Set al Cham (Grandmother of Damascus), a home-style-cooking small restaurant that sits around the corner from the Dama Rose Hotel, animated conversations about the Geneva II conference can be heard drifting through the dining room. The hopeful prospect for a ceasefire is the major question on most peoples’ minds, but all agree it is the essential first step to ending the carnage ravaging the country. The apparent imminent release of women and children from the more than 500 families who have for many months been trapped in the old city of Homs, Syria’s third largest city, has created some inchoate hope. UN Mediator Lakhdar Brahimi says men also will be allowed to leave once their names are vetted to prevent ‘terrorists’ from slipping out. It is a common security measure in this region during siege lifts and mass evacuations. The population leaving Homs will be received immediately by volunteers from the courageous and deeply humanitarian Syrian Arab Red Crescent Society (SARCS) and other humanitarian organizations that have stockpiled necessities close by. As in the case with Yarmouk Palestinian camp in south Damascus—itself still under tight siege this evening with snipers on rooftops scanning the streets and alleys below—baby formula is one of the foodstuffs most in demand due to the fact that malnourished mothers generally are no longer able to produce milk.

With respect to Yarmouk camp—of grave concern here in Syria as it is internationally—this observer had an informative three hour meeting today at UNWRA HQ on Mezzeh Autostrda. UNRWA Field Education Program Director, Mohammad Ammouri, and Abdullah Al Laham, Deputy Director of UNWRA in Syria, devote their full schedules these days trying to get aid into Yarmouk, and to bringing those under siege out. Both gentlemen gave this observer some reason to believe that finally an agreement, after more than half a dozen failed ones, might just stick tonight so that tomorrow, UNWRA trucks, waiting nearby with more than 40,000 aid parcels, can finally enter. Each aid box contains rice, sugar, flour, dried milk, cooking oil and other basics, and is designed to feed a family of five for two weeks. Families up to eight in number will get one and one-half UNWRA boxes every two weeks. Syrians trapped in Yarmouk, who number more than 2000, will also receive the emergency parcels from UNWRA with no questions asked. When this observer asked him if UNRWA, like SARCS, distributes the well-known World Food Program parcels, Mr. Al Laham raised his eyebrow a bit and did a sort of double-take “No! No. My dear. You see, we at UNWRA have our own aid parcels, in fact ours are bigger and better,” he said, and then smiled a bit sheepishly.

Three days ago UNWRA believed it would finally be allowed to enter Yarmouk with aid, but it turned out that only about 3% of the aid parcels could be distributed. This is because most aid is still being blocked by various militia, who themselves appear to be rather well fed, financed, and armed. We should know by tomorrow, January 28, if substantial aid will be allowed in and whether dying residents can be evacuated. UNWRA literally has the engines of its trucks idling nearby tonight and ready to move into the besieged camp on less than a minute’s notice if they get a green light, this observer has been advised.

In Damascus one senses that much of the population believes that what is happening at Geneva is admittedly a series of “half-steps,” to use UN envoy Brahimi’s description for the progress so far. But there is the feeling that it just might result in a breakthrough in the desperate effort to save Syria and move the nation toward a cease-fire and the opening up of humanitarian aid corridors. A few hours ago, Syrian delegation member Dr. Bouthania Shaaban commented that today’s talks had been ‘professional’—a modest achievement, at least, even though both sides speak only to Envoy Brahimi and tend to avoid eye contact with their “negotiating partners,” this while entering and exiting the meeting room from doors at opposite ends.

Syria’s delegation in Geneva is led by a seasoned, smart, deeply knowledgeable and formidable delegation. It is a group that includes the power-house Foreign Minister Walid Muallum, a former Syrian Ambassador to Washington, who has a reputation in the West, and also here, as intelligent and wily, and whose negotiating style is tough at times, and no-nonsense. “If no serious work sessions are held by [Saturday], the official Syrian delegation will leave Geneva due to the other side’s lack of seriousness or preparedness,” state television quoted Muallum telling UN mediator Lakhdar Brahimi last Friday. Mr. Muallum is credited with brokering the deal with Russia to remove Syria’s chemical weapons, enabling Assad to present his government as a partner in the project and thus to strengthen its claim to legitimacy.

Another delegation member is Syria’s Minister of Information, Omran al- Zoubi. The indefatigable Mr al-Zoubi is well known to the international media for his personal warmth, direct talk, and incisive articulations of his government’s interpretations of the crisis. During literally hundreds of media interviews, Zoubi has earned a reputation, both internationally and in Syria, as an insightful political analyst and a skilled lawyer, one who does not mince words or sugar the realities, though who is respectful of his audience. From Derra, next to the Jordanian border where the crisis began, Zoubi, a Sunni Muslim, commented late this afternoon: “We will stay here until we do the job. We will not be provoked. We will not retreat and we will be wise and flexible.” He added also that anyone at Geneva II expecting the removal of President Assad was living “in a mythical world, and let them stay in Alice in Wonderland.”

Also a member of the delegation is Muallum’s Deputy, Feisal Makdad. In a conversation with this observer earlier today, one of Makdad’s colleagues described him as a deeply knowledgeable and unflappable career diplomat with a vast command of the foreign policy issues facing Syria. Speaking in Geneva, Makdad himself explained that his government has tried to send essential supplies to beleaguered residents, but that not as much as they would have liked has successfully gotten through, a problem he attributed to two factors: “The armed groups had kept firing at those who tried to take in the aid, and the weather has not been conducive to making the movement.” He pledges that his government will continue its efforts nonetheless.

Makdad also insisted that “we don’t hold any children prisoners at all. We categorically deny that,” and claimed that the list of prisoners, supplied by the opposition, was full of errors. “I have studied this list; 60 to 70 per cent of the names are not in prison, 20 per cent have already been freed. About the rest, we don’t know anything.”

In one sense, Syria’s diplomatic team in Geneva is anchored by Dr. Shaaban. Officially President Assad’s Media Adviser, she is a former Minister of Expatriates, as well as a mother, and recently a grandmother. Distinguished as a writer and professor at Damascus University, Dr. Shaaban earned her Ph.D. in English Literature from Warwick University in the UK, and is the author of several well-received books, including Both Right and Left Handed: Arab Women Talk About Their Lives. Many media critics concede that, as the New York Times wrote, she is stellar when explaining the Syrian government’s views on foreign policy. Perhaps because of her quality of humanizing the conflict and her obvious love of her country, she is the most sought-after delegation member from either side for interviews.

It would not be shocking were the Syrian delegation to feel a bit on the defensive given the lineup of those who want them to falter. So far, however, we have seen no sign of temerity on their part. Its members insist they have come to represent Syria, bringing with them goals that include struggling through a cumbersome and slow diplomatic process to achieve a ceasefire, opening up humanitarian aid, participating in prisoner exchanges with various militia, holding a presidential election in the spring, and beginning the reconstruction of massive war damage.

We will likely learn soon if they can work through a myriad of opposing deeply antagonistic negotiating adversaries to achieve a sustainable cease-fire, reconciliation, and reconstruction. Syria’s long suffering people demand and deserve no less.

Franklin Lamb is currently a visiting Professor at the Faculty of Law, Damascus University and volunteers with the Sabra-Shatila Scholarship Program (sssp-lb.com). He can be reached at fplamb@gmail.com.

Coalition delegation of so-called “opposition” rejects a political communiqué containing principles submitted by official Syrian delegaiton

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Posted on January 27, 2014 by Alexandra Valiente

Jan 27, 2014
Geneva, (SANA delegate) – The Syrian Arab Republic’s official delegation to the Geneva 2 Conference presented a “basic elements of a political communiqué” containing principles which the coalition delegation of the so-called “opposition” rejected.
The communiqué affirms respecting Syria’s sovereignty, restoring its usurped lands, preserving its establishments, and abandoning all forms of extremism, fanaticism and takfiri ideas.
The communiqué rejects all forms of interference or foreign dictation, with the Syrians deciding upon their country’s future using democratic methods, in addition to asserting that that it’s not permissible to relinquish any part of Syria.
The communiqué stresses that the Syrian Arab Republic is a democratic country based on the basis of political pluralism, the rule of law, independence of the judiciary and citizenship, and protecting national unity and cultural diversity of the components of the Syrian society and protecting public freedom, and the Syrians are the ones who have have the right to choose their political system withoutout compromising on any subject unacceptable to the syrian people from any imposed formulae.
The communiqué asks all countries to prevent supplying weapons or training or harboring terrorists, and also stopping all kinds of media hatred incitment to perpetrate terrorist acts in accordance with international resolutions relevant to combating terrorism.
The communiqué also noted that the state establishments cost people money and hard work and therefore must be preserved, in addition to stressing the need to preserve and protect all state establishments and utilities, infrastructure, and public and private properties.
Sources close to the Syrian official delegation to Geneva asserted that the delegation was and still is open to discussing all points, but it proposed these principles which no patriotic Syrian would reject in order to find common ground, yet the coalition delegation of the so-called “opposition” rejected them.
Following is the full, exact text of the communiqué:
Basic elements for a political communiqué
1-Full respect for the sovereignty and territorial integrity of Syria and inadmissibility to give up any part of its territory. Commitment should be made in order to restore all its occupied territories.
2-Rejection of all forms of dictate and foreign interference in the Syrian internal affairs directly and indirectly so that the Syrians decide the future of their country through democratic means and the ballot box as the Syrians are the ones who have the sole right of choosing their political system without compromising on any subject unacceptable to the Syrian people.
3-The Syrian Arab Republic is a democratic country on the basis of political pluralism, the rule of law and the independence of judiciary and citizenship and protecting national unity and cultural diversity of the components of the Syrian society and protecting public freedom.
4-Rejeciton of terrorism and combating it and rejecting all forms of extremism, racism, and takfiri Wahabi thinking and asking the countries to stop providing terrorist groups, supplying them with armaments, training, financing and providing them with information or financing for those and also stopping all kinds of media hatred incitement to perpetrate terrorist acts in accordance with international resolutions relevant to combating terrorism.
5-Preserving all state institutions and the country’s infrastructure and public and private properties and protecting them.
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English Bulletin


Palestinians Against Fake Peace Talks

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Please Sign the Palestinian Declaration Here


Palestinians Against Fake Peace Talks


by Stephen Lendman


My PhotoPalestinians want genuine peace. They want their fundamental rights respected. They want long denied liberation. Activists reject ongoing talks. More on this below.
Israel wants unchallenged control. It wants unconditional surrender.
It wants militarized occupation harshness continued. It wants Palestinians denied all rights.
Washington provides full support. Kerry is no honest peace broker. Nor Netanyahu. Nor longtime Israeli collaborators.
They represent Palestine illegitimately. They have no credibility whatever. They sold out before. They did so for special benefits they derived. Another surrender is likely.
The charade continues. Peace in our time remains elusive. It’s a convenient illusion. Palestinians have no legitimate partner. They never did. For sure not now.
On January 26, Haaretz headlined “Kerry to present Israeli-Palestinian framework deal ‘within weeks.’ ”
He and Netanyahu met in Davos. They attended the 2014 World Economic Forum. They addressed participants.
Previous articles discussed their deplorable comments. One lie followed another throughout them.
Privately they discussed Kerry’s framework agreement. It’s duplicitous. It’s entirely one-sided. It’s a work in progress.
No legitimate Palestinian leader would accept it. Abbas is a longtime traitor. It remains to be seen what he’ll do. Odds favor Oslo 2.0.
Nothing will be resolved. Occupation harshness will continue. So will settlement expansions.
Netanyahu was clear and unequivocal saying: “I do not intend to evacuate any settlements or uproot a single Israeli.”
previous article discussed Israel’s likely Jordan Valley annexation. It comprises 30% of the West Bank. It’s 90% Judaized.
In 1967, Jordan Valley Palestinian residents numbered around 320,000. Less than 60,000 remain.
Israel controls over 60% of the West Bank. It demands Jerusalem as its exclusive capital. Netanyahu and like-minded hardliners want all valued Judea and Samaria areas annexed.
Kerry endorses worthless land swaps in return. He wants them legitimizing the illegitimate. His plan assures leaving Palestinians worse off than ever.
He’ll call it success. So will Netanyahu. Expect Abbas to accept what demands rejection. How Palestinians react remains to be seen.
On Friday, deputy State Department spokeswoman Marie Harf lied saying Kerry’s plan isn’t a US one. “The framework that we are in discussions with is based on our discussions with both sides and the parties leading up to this point.”
It’s provisions “will guide the discussion on all of the issues going forward.”
It’s a US/Israeli one. Palestinians negotiators are being pressured to accept it.
Netanyahu lied saying Kerry only offered ideas so far. What Israel wants it’s getting. Major issues are agreed on.
Fine tuning continues. Expect months more of the same. Maybe longer. Rights mattering most to Palestinians are denied.
The include ending occupation, genuine peace, Palestinian independence, control of their borders, offshore waters and air space, the right of return, illegal settlements, resource rights, and East Jerusalem as their exclusive capital.
Kerry’s plan is more frame-up than framework. He said Palestinians will have an independent state.
False! They’ll have isolated bantustans on worthless scrub land.
Israel will be left more secure, he said. It’s a ruse to continue occupation harshness. It legitimizes annexation of over 60% of the West Bank.
Continued land theft takes more. When Israel’s Apartheid Wall is completed, additional territory will be declared part of Israel.
Its only security problem is one it creates. No legitimate one exists. Nor regional threats.
An eventual full, phased, final Israeli army withdrawal is coming, said Kerry. False! Palestine will stay occupied. Israel will control its borders, coastal waters, air space and resources.
Kerry addressed diaspora Palestinians. He promised a just agreed on solution. False again! Since 1948, their legitimate right of return was denied. It remains so.
Nothing in Kerry’s plan suggests equitable conflict resolution. He claims its terms end it and all claims. It mutually recognizes Palestine for Palestinians and Israel for Jews, he said.
It bears repeating. It’s entirely one-sided. It gives Israel everything it wants. It denies fundamental Palestinian rights.
It leaves them worse off than ever. It makes ending conflict impossible. It assures continued Palestinian suffering.
Its negotiators are coming to Washington. They’ll arrive this week. They’ll meet with Kerry. Rhetorically they reject his terms. They fundamentally accepted them much earlier.
According to Haaretz:
“Both sides have come out with aggressive statements to make the other side derails the talks and bears responsibility for their failure.”
Public comments belie what’s agreed on privately. Fine-tuning continues. Abbas wants Palestinians fooled. Oslo 2.0 is disastrous. It’s unconditional surrender. Expect him to call it success.
On January 26, Palestinians demonstrated across the West Bank. They held marches. They challenged ongoing peace talks. They denounced them as fake.
They called them farcical. They make conflict resolution impossible. Hundreds rallied in Hebron and Nablus. Talks intend to “liquidate the question of Palestine and prolong the Israeli occupation,” they said.
Palestinian People’s Party central committee member Fahmi Shahin called on PA officials to “immediately stop peace negotiations and reject US sponsorship to these talks.”
America’s proposal “to accept the Israeli occupation as a fact must be rejected,” he stressed.
He urged PA officials to oppose recognizing Israel as a Jewish state. He demands they support Palestinians rights.
He wants Israel’s occupation ended. Diaspora Palestinians right of return must be respected. Conflict resolution depends on granting Palestinians all rights sovereign independent states enjoy.
In Nablus, hundreds rallied at the Martyrs roundabout. Kerry’s plan prevents conflict resolution. It makes current conditions worse.
Democratic Front for the Liberation of Palestine political bureau member Ramzi Rabah said Kerry’s drawn out talks give Israel more time to steal land, dispossess Palestinians and expand settlements.
He wants a new status quo worse then the current one. He’s destroying any possibility of Palestinian liberation with East Jerusalem its exclusive capital.
He demanded PA officials categorically reject his ideas. He called for ending sham talks. He called them “a vicious circle of futile negotiations.”
Israel alone benefits. Palestinian rights are being compromised. The longer talks are drawn out, the closer they are to being beyond fixing.
Fatah Central Committee member Tawfiq Tirawi called ongoing talks a slippery slope to “zero results.”
He believes armed resistance is the only possible way to change things. “We must go back to initiating and become part of a circle of action,” he said.
“If we become part of this circle, many things will change. I’m talking about all kinds of resistance, but within a unified Palestinian framework that is agreed to by all sides of Fatah and factions outside it.”
“As part of our plan, we will choose the correct form of resistance and act accordingly.”
“The big explosion in Palestine is coming,” he believes. “All of Israel’s actions have placed the Palestinian public under immense pressure. They have no choice but to explode in the face of the occupation.”
“We know what the Israelis and Americans are suggesting” in private talks. “So far, the negotiations are taking place only with the Americans, not the Israelis, and the Americans are liars.”
“There is no framework agreement. It’s a lie. Even if Kerry (presents) an agreement, Palestinians will reject it.”
“There will be a vote, either inside Fatah or among the Palestinian leadership, and the American proposals will be rejected.”
“Anyone who thinks there will be a (lsraeli/US recognized legitimate) state is sorely mistaken.”
Under current conditions, he added, Palestinian liberation is impossible. Don’t expect it in the next two decades.
US, other Western, and complicit Arab states pressured Palestinians to negotiate against their will, he added.
PLO secretary general Yasser Abed Rabbo said much the same thing. He called current talks futile. They fall short of even agreeing on a framework deal.
Palestinians can’t accept his ideas. They’re vague. They’re entirely one-sided.
“Israel revealed its cards during the talks, and all the illusions that existed in the beginning have since drowned at sea,” he added.
Talks began last July. Zero progress was made, he said. Everything Palestinians most want they’re denied. Israeli demands alone are met.
It’s pointless to continue what can’t work, he said. It’s futile without ending occupation harshness. It’s impossible while Israel employs brutal force.
On January 25, Israeli forces killed a Palestinian civilian. They injured five others. They used live fire in response to stone throwing.
In the week ending January 22, Israeli warplanes attacked Gaza eight times. Two deaths were reported. So were at least four injuries.
Israeli forces commit repeated high crimes against humanity. They murder Palestinians in cold blood. They kill young children.
From January 16 – 22, they conducted 73 incursions into Palestinian communities. Doing so reflects state terror.
At least 44 Palestinian civilians were arrested. They included 10 children and three women. They committed no crimes.
Israeli naval forces opened fire on Palestinian fishermen. No casualties were reported. Several arrests were made.
Israeli violates international humanitarian law with impunity. It does so repeatedly. It does it multiple times daily.
So-called peace talks ignore these abuses. They’re crimes against humanity. Palestinian negotiators should prioritize ending them.
They’re not discussed. Nor settler violence. Nor the impossibility of peace with Netanyahu’s fascist government.
In November 2013, the General Assembly declared 2014 as the “Year of Solidarity with Palestinians.” Why this year? Why not every year? Why not action, not words accomplishing nothing?
Israel’s UN ambassador Ron Prosor responded as expected. He’s a right wing extremist. He fronts for Israeli lawlessness. His comments are way over-the-top. He turns truth on its head. He does it repeatedly.
He accused General Assembly members of “oiling the Palestinian propaganda machine.”
“Rather that putting an end to Palestinian incitement, the UN is now the primary platform for Palestinian propaganda,” he claimed.
“The organization allocates endless resources to advancing lies and half-truths of the Palestinian leadership instead of dealing with pressing issues facing the international community and the Middle East region.”
He claimed encouraging solidarity with Palestinians fosters a climate of anti-Israeli sentiment.
He blamed Palestinians for Israeli crimes. Netanyahu does it repeatedly. Peace is elusive as ever. Palestinian liberation remains a distant dream. It’s impossible under current conditions.

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Syria Army Sustains Advance in Aleppo, Strikes Terrorists across Country

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The Syrian army on Monday killed a number of terrorists in several provinces and sustained its advance in Aleppo, maintaining its control over the north of Aleppo airport area, according to SANA.

Syria Army
A military source told SANA that the army eliminated armed terrorist groups in the neighborhoods of al-Rashideen, Karm al-Maysar and Aleppo old city.

The source added that the army clashed with terrorists who tried to attack the people of Kifr Kar and blockade the road of Aleppo-Maarat al-Arteeq, killing and injuring scores of terrorists and destroying a number of their vehicles.

A number of terrorists were killed and many of their vehicles and weapons were destroyed in a series of operations carried out by the army units in the areas near Aleppo Central Prison and in Haylan, Hayyan, Babees, al-Mansoura, Andan, Hreitan and Deir Hafer.
Meanwhile, the army targeted and destroyed terrorists’ hideouts in the town of Kweires in Aleppo east-southern countryside, killing a number of terrorists and destroying a 23 mm anti-aircraft machinegun.

A military source told SANA that army units eliminated a number of terrorists in al-Dar al-Kabera, al-Ghasbiyeh, and al-Khaldiyeh, among them the leader of an armed terrorist group nicknamed Abu Allil.

The source added that a number of terrorists were killed and wounded in the villages of al-Abboudiyeh, Mutahlath Ghirbet al-Nua’mat, Burghulat al-Sharqiyeh in Qseir countryside.

While other army units eliminated all members of an armed terrorist group in the village of Um Sahrij in al-Mukharam area, among them the leader of the terrorist group Fahed Ali al-Maghsoub.

In Homs city a number of terrorists were killed and wounded in a military operations against their hideouts in Bab Hud, al-Warsheh, al-Safsafeh, Jourt al-Shayyah and Souk al-Makbi neighborhoods.

Army units killed many terrorists, some of them are Jordanians and Kuwaitis, in addition to destroying several cars equipped with machineguns.

A military source told SANA that army units eliminated armed terrorist groups in the surrounding area of Eyb school and destroyed two machinegun-equipped cars.

The bodies of the terrorists Ahmad Dalil from Jordan and Ayob Mohammad Khalil al-Jandali from Kuwait, were identified among the dead.

The source added that an armed terrorist group was eliminated in the area surrounding the Artistic Institute in Daraa City, and their weapons were destroyed.

Source: Agencies
27-01-2014 - 18:19 Last updated 27-01-2014 - 18:21



قناة المنار برفقة الجيش العربي السوري في مطار الطبقة العسكري بالرقة 25 1 2014


تقرير غربي عن المسلحين الذين استسلموا للجيش السوري



‫مخيم اليرموك مسلحون يهربون من المخيم ليسلموا أنفسهم


غارة تدمر المركز الاعلامي بداريا


Al-Mayadin TV: President Bashar al-Assad personality of the year 2013

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د

ديبلوماسي غربي: الرئيس السوري أسد في الميدان العسكري وداهية في الميدان السياسي وشعبيته جارفة


Beirut, (SANA) Al-Mayadin TV announced President Bashar al-Assad the personality of the year 2013 according to a poll run on its website and lasted for three weeks on 16 Arab and international personalities.

Al-Mayadin said that President al-Assad won 193,404 votes with a percentage of 37,97 % of the total votes who exceeded 500,000.

Sultan of Oman, Sultan Qabous bin Said, ranked second and Iraqi Prime Minister, Nouri al-Maliki, ranked third.
-----
  1. Assad: 37.97%
  2. Qabous: 18.19%
  3. Malki: 11.3%
  4. Putin: 9.83%
  5. Hamad bin Khalifa: 5.45%
  6. Mursi: 3.56%
  7. Sisi: 3.64%
  8. Rouhani: 2.73%
  9. Pope: 1.66%
  10. Snouden: 1.46%
  11. Abbas: 1.07%
  12. Madoru:0.97%
  13. Bandar: 0.84%
  14. Tunis Quadrant: 0.82%
  15. Obama: 0.81%
  16. Ashton: 0.65%

قناة الميادين تعلن السيد الرئيس بشار الأسد شخصية العام 2013



شخصية العام ٢٠١٣ التي حصدت أكبر عدد من الأصوات في التصويت الذي طرحته قناة  الميادين: الرئيس السوري  بشار الأسد بـ ١٩٣٤٠٤ صوت

فاز الرئيس السوري بشار الأسد في المرتبة الأولى في التصويت الذي أجرته قناة الميادين لاختيار شخصية العام 2013، بنسبة تصويت بلغت 37.97 من إجمالي الأصوات، وبعدد أصوات بلغ 193404 صوتاً.

وجاء في المركز الثاني سلطان عمان قابوس بن سعيد، بنسبة مصوتين بلغت 18.19%، ونال 92295 صوتاً.

(لمشاهدة الحلقة الخاصة لإعلان نتيجة التصويت كاملةً إضغط هنا)

وحل ثالثاً، رئيس الوزراء العراقي نوري المالكي، بنسبة 11.35% من إجمالي عدد الموصتين، وبعدد أصوات بلغ 57807 صوتاً.

رابعاً، حصد الرئيس الروسي فلاديمير بوتين ما نسبته 8.93% من الأصوات، وبـ 45480 صوتاً.

وفي المرتبة الخامسة، جاء أمير قطر السابق حمد بن خليفة آل ثاني، بنسبة أصوات بلغت 5.45%، ونال 27805 صوتاً.

وجاء في المرتبة السادسة الرئيس المصري السابق محمد مرسي بنسبة أصوات بلغت 3.56%، وبعدد أصواتٍ بلغ 18176 صوتاً.

وفي المرتبة السابعة، نال وزير الدفاع المصري عبدالفتاح السيسي 18072 صوتاً، وبنسبة تصويت بلغت 3.54 صوتاً.

وبنسبة 2.73%، نال الرئيس الإيراني حسن روحاني المرتبة الثامنة، حاصداً 13905 من الأصوات.

ونال بابا الفاتيكان فرنسيس الأول ما نسبته 1.66% من الأصوات، وبعدد أصواتٍ بلغ 8469 صوتاً. ليكون في المرتبة التاسعة بين الشخصيات الستة عشر.

وفي المرتبة العاشرة، نال عميل الإستخبارات الأميركية السابق إدوارد سنودن 7484 صوتاً بنسبة تصويت بلغت 1.46% من إجمالي عدد الأصوات.

وفي المرتبة الـ11 حصد رئيس السلطة الفلسطينية محمود عباس 5493 صوتاً، بنسبة تصويت بلغت 1.07 من إجمالي عدد المصوتين.

وجاء في المرتبة الـ12، الرئيس الفنزويلي نيكولاس مادورو بنسبة تصويت بلغت 0.97%، وبعدد أصواتٍ بلغ 4900 صوتاً.

وفي المرتبة الـ13، نال رئيس الإستخبارات السعودية الأمير بندر بن سلطان ما نسبته 0.84% من إجمالي عدد الصوتين، حاصداً 4277 صوتاً.

ونال رباعي الحوار في تونس نسبة تصويت بلغت 0.82% ليحل في المرتبة الـ14، وبعدد أصواتٍ بلغ 4171 صوتاً.

وجاء الرئيس الأميركي باراك أوباما في المرتبة الـ15، بنسبة تصويت بلغت 0.81%، وعدد أصواتٍ بلغ 4165 صوتاً.

وفي المرتبة الـ16، منسقة شؤون الخارجية والأمن في الإتحاد الأوروبي كاثرين آشتون، بنسبة تصويت بلغت 0.65%، وعدد أصوات بلغ 3359 صوتاً.

وقد بلغ إجمالي عدد المصوتين 509262 صوتاً موزعين على عدد كبير من دول العالم.


US resumes aid to Saudi’s Al-Qaeda terrorists in Syria

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http://www.presstv.com/detail/2014/01/27/347996/us-resumes-aid-to-militants-in-syria/

Tue Jan 28, 2014 3:54AM GMT

As negotiations between Syrian officials and the country’s foreign-backed opposition hit a deadlock over the issue of transfer of power, the United States has resumed deliveries of aid to the opposition.

The “non-lethal” aid comes more than a month after al-Qaeda-linked insurgents seized warehouses and prompted a sudden cutoff of Western supplies to other militant groups which are publically backed by Western countries.

US officials said Monday that “the communications equipment and other items are being funneled for now only to non-armed opposition groups,” according to The Associated Press.
The decision came after Congress secretly approved the resumption of the aid plan.

Experts say the aid could be seen as a US reward to the militants for their participation in ongoing peace talks with President Bashar Assad’s government in Geneva, Switzerland.

The foreign-backed militants in Syria, now split into al-Qaeda linked groups and other groups, have been fighting the Syrian government for nearly three years.

The US officials, who weren’t authorized to speak publicly on the matter and demanded anonymity, told the AP that the aid was being sent through Turkey into Syria, with the coordination of the Free Syrian Army’s Supreme Military Council, led by Western-backed Gen. Salim Idris.

The halt in supplies last month was only a “precautionary measure” until the White House could once again verify the security of aid packages, the officials said.

More than 100,000 people have died in Syria’s unrests, now in its third year. Internationally brokered peace talks began last week in Geneva but have so far reached nowhere.

The Syrian government’s delegation at the talks presented a declaration of principles for negotiations but it was rejected by the other side. The foreign-backed opposition said the declaration did not mention a transition of power.

The Syrian government insists that Syrians would choose a political system without “imposed formulas from other countries.” It says the only way to decide the future of the country is through holding an election. However, the opposition and Western allies want President Assad to step down.

Lebanese Media Take Aim at Viewers

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Israeli soldiers patrol on October 9, 2013 along the Israel-Syria border after mortar fire from inside war-torn Syria hit the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights. (Photo: AFP - Jalaa Marey).
Published Monday, January 27, 2014
The Lebanese Broadcasting Corporation (LBCI) did not waste any time issuing an apology for its January 24 news report, broadcast from an Israeli air force base.

LBCI explained in a statement that for its news coverage from Haifa or from the West Bank, “it depends on a Palestinian production company called Med Media, which is based in Ramallah and licensed by the Palestinian Information Ministry."

“The context was an Israeli show of force,” read the statement, “in a blatant Israeli attempt to reserve a seat at the Geneva II conference ... However, LBCI admits that it fell into a trap set by the Israeli army during the preparation of the report, and it thought it could use a Lebanese channel for its purposes …”

“LBCI apologizes to its audience for this fall, which was a result of a misunderstanding, and had no intention to collude with the army that committed atrocities in Lebanon.”
The unequivocal apology pleased many who felt distraught about the report and saw it as a violation of their dignity, before being a violation of Lebanese law. Just as social media sites filled with angry reactions, the statement of apology was shared positively.
But as soon as the fire was put out on the LBCI front, it was ignited at Lebanon’s al-Jadeed and MTV channels. On January 25, the channels announced the death of Sheikh Abbas Zogheib during the clashes between the Hajoula and Zaiter clans in Dahiyeh. It later turned out that he was alive.
As usual, this mistake was not spared from comments on social media. Yet some journalists at al-Jadeed decided to attack the viewers who criticized them. The news director told citizens to "go home" and a colleague described viewers who criticized the channel's work as "petty." Another al-Jadeed employee told them to stop "babbling" and that any criticism stems from the fact that “they are jealous of us.”
These responses tell us something about the special circumstances of these journalists’ profession. They believe nobody should criticize without knowing the surrounding circumstances. While true in principle, particularly for professional critics, it should not apply to regular viewers, especially when the results are disastrous.
Many conditions can cause journalists to make mistakes, consciously or against their will. However, the conditions the colleagues decided to point to were "pressure" and "danger.” One colleague said that as she is out there doing her job, the viewers are sitting at home, which is her "calamity."
Can someone explain how it’s a "calamity" to the media to have its audience sitting at home watching? How "shameful" of you to express your opinion. You are welcome only when you clap. Do these journalists understand that viewers are actually leaving their homes to report news and information? Have they asked themselves why?
Many bloggers have negative opinion of journalists and the media: "If they were doing their jobs, we wouldn’t exist.” Those journalists who do not wish for anyone to express an opinion unless they know a situation’s entire context – what do they know about the entirety of a certain situation? Viewers only want a journalist who makes a mistake to admit that mistake and apologize, not chastise the audience.
The audience might not know the working conditions of journalists – they do not want to know, and they are not expected to. They only wish for journalists to take responsibility for their actions. However, when this type of journalism is unavailable and the ability to admit to mistakes is lacking, one can only believe LBCI, when it describes its apology as "courage." Yes, an apology requires courage and culture.
This article is an edited translation from the Arabic Edition.

Syria: Innocent civilians caught in the crossfire of the siege of Adra as Islamist rebels are accused of massacre

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Rebels were accused of a massacre in the town last month, forcing survivors to flee or hide. Patrick Cockburn finds that neither side has the strength for a victory
Jan 28, 2014, The Independent
“They came through the main sewer at 4.30am and caught us by surprise,” says a Syrian soldier, who gave his name as Abu Ali, describing the rebel capture of part of the industrial town of Adra, just north of Damascus. “They chose a cold day in December to attack when there was snow and you could not see more than 2ft in front of you.”
Adra, with its giant cement, steel and car plants, has now become one more Syrian town where the army and rebels confront each other but neither side has the strength to win a decisive victory. As they skirmish, locals either flee or cower in their houses with little or no electricity or water.
The rebels who stormed the workers’ housing complex at Adra on 11 December belonged to two much-feared jihadi groups, Jabhat al-Nusra, the official al-Qa’ida affiliate in Syria, and the Jaysh al-Islam.
Khalal al-Helmi, a frail-looking 63-year-old retired employee of the oil ministry, says: “Three men came into our building and shouted ‘Go down to the basement’. We were down there three days.” 
What went on in the streets of Adra immediately after the rebel occupation appears to add another grisly page to the list of atrocities in the Syrian civil war. Survivors say at least 32 members of religious minorities – Alawi, Christians, Druze and Shia – were killed immediately or taken away by gunmen who went from house to house with lists of names.
They are also reported to have killed doctors and nurses in a clinic and workers in a bakery who were thrown into their own ovens. Given that the jihadis still hold this part of Adra, the exact details cannot be checked, but survivors who have taken refuge in an enormous cement plant three miles away have no doubt that a massacre took place.
It is not easy to get to Adra, even though it is close to Damascus. We took a highway through the mountains west of the capital and then suddenly drove off it on to a precipitous earth track down which an enormous orange truck with a trailer carrying  a bulldozer was driving in front of us. The bulldozer turned out to be one of several making tracks through the scrub and heaping banks of earth to offer some protection from rifle fire. “Drive fast because there are many snipers about,” said an army officer escorting our small convoy.
Our destination was the giant cement plant which a former worker, now a refugee, said once employed 937 workers and produced 3,000 to 4,000 tonnes of cement a day. It now looks like an enormous, dead mechanical monster with pathetic clothes lines carrying refugees’ washing strung between big concrete columns. Nearby was a small party of displaced people from Adra looking bedraggled and depressed. They said the army brought them bread but they were short of everything else.
The fall of part of Adra turned out, like almost everything else in the Syrian civil war, to be more complicated than first accounts. The town was always vulnerable because it is just north of Douma and Eastern Ghouta, both rebel strongholds. An English teacher called Billal said he had been a refugee for a year because the rebels had first taken the old town of Adra in February last year. He and his father took refuge in housing near the cement plant. It was only months later that Jabhat al-Nusra and Jaysh al-Islam launched a second well-planned attack down a sewage tunnel that had outflanked the army defenders.
Syrian Army officers said they thought there were some 500 rebels in the big new housing complex at Adra. It is doubtful if they really know because they also said the rebels were digging tunnels so they could move without being fired on. They had local help, according to a former Adra resident, Hassan Kassim Mohammed, who said refugees from Douma and East Ghouta had been living in half-completed apartment blocks. These had acted as “sleeper cells” for the rebels and had given them lists of government employees. An employee of the information ministry, Heytham Mousa, has disappeared with his wife and daughter and his mobile phone is answered by a man who says he belongs to Jabhat al-Nusra.
I asked several officers why they did not counter-attack and retake Adra. They answered that there were thousands of civilians there whom the rebels were using as “human shields” and they denied an alternative explanation that they were short of soldiers. Even so, it was striking how few Syrian Army troops there were yesterday, either at the cement plant or in the front line, where there had been fighting around a bridge earlier in the week.
“They captured it and we took it back in five hours fighting,” said Abu Ali. An explanation as to quite why small rebel enclaves persist in Damascus and Homs is that government forces cannot afford to suffer the casualties inevitable if they stormed them. They have therefore relied on sieges and artillery bombardment to wear down rebel-held districts.
There may be doubts about the exact number of people murdered in Adra but not about the suffering of those who have fled to the industrial zone. It is cold even in the middle of the day and the Syrian Arab Red Crescent yesterday issued a statement saying it “was deeply concerned about the plight of the Adra residents who had fled the area”. It had distributed 31,000 blankets and 7,000 mattresses and was trying to provide clean water to 30,000 people. Adra is now surrounded by sand and rubble with occasional Syrian army outposts on top. Even so, the exact position of the front line was worryingly uncertain. At one point, a couple of Syrian army soldiers seem to have mistaken us for the enemy and fired a couple of shots.
A soldier in the vehicle in front of us jumped on to a heap of rocks and waved furiously in the direction from which the firing had come. Around the corner we came on what appeared to be an entire Syrian armoured division but we turned out to have stumbled on a tank cemetery where the Syrian army disposes of obsolete tanks which are left to gradually rust away.

WHAT IS REALLY HAPPENING IN FRANCE ? (IMPORTANT)


Does a Qatar-Sponsored ‘Smoking Gun’ Report Reveal An Ulterior Motive?

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Qatari Emir, Sheikh Hamad bin Khalifa Al-Thani addresses the opening of the high-level segment of the annual U.N. climate talks in Doha, Qatar, Tuesday, Dec. 4, 2012. (AP Photo/Osama Faisal)
Qatari Emir, Sheikh Hamad bin Khalifa Al-Thani addresses the opening of the high-level segment of the annual U.N. climate talks in Doha, Qatar, Tuesday, Dec. 4, 2012. (AP Photo/Osama Faisal)
Jan 24, 2014, Mint Press News
report released exclusively this week to CNN and The Guardian has been touted as evidence possibly proving widespread torture, starvation and the cause of thousands of prisoner deaths by the Syrian regime.
However, the allegations are drawn from documentation acquired by a legal firm hired by the Qatari government, who is known to be a regional rival to Syria, mostly due to sectarian divides. When it comes to backing Syria’s rebels, the gas-rich Gulf monarchy is competing with Saudi Arabia on both funding and lobbying. Qatar’s funding of rebels inside Syria has arguably aggravated war crimes as the government of Bashar al-Assad, Syria’s leader, is being criticized by Western powers of committing crimes against rebels.
It is perceived by analysts and citizens inside and outside of Syria that the Qataris are setting the stage for an opportunity to control a post-Assad Syria by building loyalty through the rebels by throwing loads of money at them.
According to a Financial Times article last year, “In the shell-blasted areas of rebel-held Syria, few appear to be aware of the vast sums that Qatar has contributed — estimated by rebel and diplomatic sources to be about $1 (billion), but put by people close to the Qatar government at as much as $3 (billion).”

The Qatari report

The report was arranged by Carter-Ruck, a law firm in London hired by the Qatari royals. Some analysts think the report requires further scrutiny.
Three former prosecutors, Desmond de Silva and David M. Crane, who participated in the Special Court for Sierra Leone, and Geoffrey Nice, who prosecuted Slobodan Milosevic at the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia, were retained, along with forensics experts, to review pictures from a Syrian military policeman called “Caesar,” who had left Syria in 2011, according to the report. He was originally assigned to document the deaths of prisoners held in detention, the report claims.
Given the Qatari-bought report, entitled ‘A Report into the Credibility of Certain Evidence with Regard to Torture and Execution of Persons Incarcerated by the Current Syrian Regime,’ cites information from only one source — “Caesar” — it should be taken with a certain level of scepticism, unless multiple sources and full names are later to be revealed. Photos were also released with the document, showing bodies with strangulation marks around the neck, severe wounds from being beaten.
It’s obvious the report was rushed to be published.
“The interviewing of the defector, who was codenamed “Caesar” for his own protection, took place on the 12th, 13th, and 18th January 2014,” the report states on page six.
However, the report itself was released only two days later, which begs the question of how much proper analysis was actually given to the interview, or the approximately 55,000 images their subject provided the interviewers and investigators.
As an article by the Christian Science Monitor noted this week, on page 17, only 5,500 images were actually examined by the forensics team — 10 percent of the total images supposedly provided by the defector. Of the samples provided in the report, which are approximately 10, marks around necks are vivid on naked or mostly naked bodies of men, along with bruises and cuts all over the bodies.
“It was apparent that most deceased persons had between four or five images taken of them allowing an estimate of images one thousand three hundred (1,300) individual corpses being considered by the forensics team,” the report said.
It goes on to note no images of children were found, and only one woman is found to be photographed, who didn’t appear to have injuries, as she was clothed.
Of the 10 percent of photos examined, only 835 people were looked at “in detail,” the report states.
However, the report was paid for by the Qatari government and should be viewed with a more critical eye. Claims by one unidentified source and paid for by a government with known grievances against Assad are certainly reason for ulterior motives to lurk behind the report’s publishing.

FRANCE: THE SHOAH AS STATE RELIGION?

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FRIDAY, JANUARY 24, 2014 AT 6:11PM GILAD ATZMON

Blasphemy in Secular France


by DIANA JOHNSTONE
Paris.

http://www.counterpunch.org/

The campaign by the French government, mass media and influential organizations to silence the Franco-Cameroonese humorist Dieudonné M’Bala M’Bala continues to expose a radical split in perception within the French population. The official “mobilization” against the standup comedian, first called for by Interior Minister Manuel Valls at a ruling Socialist Party gathering last summer, portrays the entertainer as a dangerous anti-Semitic rabble rouser, whose “quenelle”* gesture is interpreted as a “Nazi salute in reverse”.

For his fans and supporters, those accusations are false and absurd.

The most significant result of the Dieudonné uproar so far is probably the dawning realization, among more and more people, that the “Shoah”, or Holocaust, functions as the semi-official State Religion of France.

On RTL television last January 10, the well-known nonconformist commentator Eric Zemmour (who happens to be Jewish) observed that it was “grotesque and ridiculous” to associate Dieudonné with the Third Reich. Zemmour described Dieudonné as a product of the French left’s multiculturalism. “It’s the left that has taught us since May ’68 that it is prohibited to prohibit, that we must shock the bourgeois. It is the left that has turned the Shoah into the supreme religion of the Republic…”

Zemmour suggested that Dieudonné was provoking “the respectable left-wing bourgeoisie” and that he “reproaches Jews for wanting to conserve the monopoly of suffering and steal primacy in suffering from descendants of slavery”.

There is more than that at stake. Reminders of the Shoah serve indirectly to justify France’s increasingly pro-Israel foreign policy in the Middle East. Dieudonné opposed the war against Libya enough to go there to show his solidarity with the country being bombed by NATO.

Dieudonné began his career as a militant anti-racist. Instead of apologizing for his 2003 sketch mocking an “extreme Zionist settler”, Dieudonné retorted by gradually extending his sphere of humor to cover the Shoah. The campaign against him can be seen as an effort to restore the sacred character of the Shoah by enforcing repression of a contemporary form of blasphemy.

To confirm this impression, on January 9 an “historic” agreement was reached between the Paris Prosecutor’s Office and the French Shoah Memorial that any teenager found guilty of anti-Semitism may be sentenced to undergo a course of “sensitivity to the extermination of the Jews”. Studying genocide is supposed to teach them “republican values of tolerance and respect for others”.

This is perhaps exactly what they don’t need. The Prosecutor’s Office may be unaware of all the young people who are saying that they have had too much, rather than not enough, Shoah education.

An atypical article in Le Monde of January 8 cited opinions anyone can easily hear from French youth, but which are usually ignored. After interviewing ten left-leaning, middle class spectators who denied any anti-Semitism, Soren Seelow quoted Nico, a 22-year-old left-voting law student at the Sorbonne, who adores Dieudonné for “liberating” laughter in what he considers a stuffy conformist society of “good thoughts”. As for the Shoah, Nico complained that “they’ve been telling us about it since elementary school. When I was 12, I saw a film with bulldozers pushing bodies into ditches. We are subjected to a guilt-inducing morality from the earliest age.”

In addition to history courses, teachers organize commemorations of the Shoah and trips to Auschwitz. Media reminders of the Shoah are almost daily. Unique in French history, the so-called Gayssot law provides that any statement denying or minimizing the Shoah can be prosecuted and even lead to prison.

Scores of messages received from French citizens in response to my earlier article (CounterPunch, January 1, 2014) as well as private conversations make it clear to me that reminders of the Shoah are widely experienced by people born decades after the defeat of Nazism as invitations to feel guilty or at least uncomfortable for crimes they did not commit. Like many demands for solemnity, the Shoah can be felt as a subject that imposes uneasy silence. Laughter is then felt as liberation.

But for others, such laughter can only be an abomination.

Dieudonné has been fined 8,000 euros for his song “Shoananas”, and further such condemnations are in the offing. Such lawsuits, brought primarily by LICRA (Ligue internationale contre le racisme et l’antisémitisme), also aim to wipe him out financially.

“Hatred”

One line in the chorus against Dieudonné is that he is “no longer a comedian” but has turned his shows into “anti-Semitic political meetings” which spread “hatred”. Even the distant New Yorker magazine has accused the humorist of making a career out of peddling “hatred”. This raises images of terrible things happening that are totally remote from a Dieudonné show or its consequences.

There was no atmosphere of hatred among the thousands of fans left holding their tickets when Dieudonné’s January 9 show in Nantes was banned at the last minute by France’s highest administrative authority, the Conseil d’Etat. Nobody was complaining of being deprived of a “Nazi rally”. Nobody thought of causing harm to anyone. All said they had come to enjoy the show. They represented a normal cross-section of French youth, largely well-educated middle class. The show was banned on the grounds of “immaterial disturbance of public order”. The disappointed crowd dispersed peacefully. Dieudonné’s shows have never led to any public disorder.

But there is no mistaking the virulent hatred against Dieudonné.

Philippe Tesson, a prominent editor, announced during a recent radio interview that he would “profoundly rejoice” at seeing Dieudonné executed by a firing squad. “He is a filthy beast, so get rid of him!” he exclaimed.

The internet Rabbi Rav Haim Dynovisz, in the course of a theology lesson, acknowledged that Darwin’s theory of evolution, which he rejects, had been proved by Dieudonné to apply to “certain” people, who must have descended from gorillas.

Two 17-year-olds have been permanently expelled from their high school for having made the quenelle gesture, on grounds of “crimes against humanity”. The Franco-Israeli web magazine JSSNews is busily investigating the identities of persons making the quenelle sign in order to try to get them fired from their jobs, boasting that it will “add to unemployment in France”.

The owners of the small Paris theater, “La Main d’Or”, rented by Dieudonné on a lease running until 2019, recently rushed back from Israel expressing their intention to use a technicality to end his lease and throw him out.

The worst thing Dieudonné has ever said during his performances, so far as I am aware, was a personal insult against the radio announcer Patrick Cohen. Cohen has insistently urged that persons he calls “sick brains” such as Dieudonné or Tariq Ramadan be banned from television appearances. In late December, French television (which otherwise has kept Dieudonné off the airwaves) recorded Dieudonné saying that “when I hear Patrick Cohen talking, I think to myself, you know, the gas chambers…Too bad…”

With the anti-Dieudonné campaign already well underway, this offensive comment was seized upon as if it were typical of Dieudonné’s shows. It was an excessively crude reaction by Dieudonné to virulent personal attacks against himself.

Irreverence is a staple for standup comics, like it or not. And Dieudonné’s references to the Holocaust, or Shoah, all fall into the category of irreverence.

On matters other than the Shoah, there is no shortage of irreverence in France.

Traditional religions, as well as prominent individuals, are regularly caricatured in a manner so scatological as to make the quenelle look prudish. In October, 2011, Paris police intervened against traditional Catholics who sought to interrupt a play which included (the apparent) pouring of excrement over the face of Jesus. The political-media establishment vigorous defended the play, unconcerned that it was perceived by some people as “offensive”.

Recently, France gave a big welcome to the Ukrainian group calling itself “Femen”, young women who seem to have studied Gene Sharp’s doctrines of provocation, and use their bare breasts as (ambiguous) statements. These women were rapidly granted residence papers (so hard to get for many immigrant workers) and allowed to set up shop in the midst of the main Muslim neighborhood in Paris, where they immediately attempted to try (unsuccessfully) to provoke the incredulous residents. The blonde Femen leader was even chosen to portray the symbol of the Republic, Marianne, on the current French postage stamp, although she does not speak French.

Last December 20, these “new feminists” invaded the Church of the Madeleine near the Elysée Palace in Paris, acted out “the abortion of Jesus” and then pissed on the high altar. There were no cries of indignation from the French government. The Catholic Church is complaining, but such complaints have a feeble echo in France today.

Why the Shoah Must Be Sacred

When Dieudonné sings lightly of the Shoah, he is believed by some to be denying the Holocaust and calling for its repetition (a contradictory proposition, upon reflection). The sacred nature of the Shoah is defended by the argument that keeping alive the memory of the Holocaust is essential to prevent it from “happening again”. By suggesting the possibility of repetition, it keeps fear alive.

This argument is generally accepted as a sort of law of nature. We must keep commemorating genocide to prevent it from happening again. But is there really any evidence to support this argument?

Nothing proves that repeated reminders of an immense historic event that happened in the past prevent it from happening again. History doesn’t work that way. As for the Shoah, gas chambers and all, it is quite preposterous to imagine that it could happen again considering all the factors that made it happen in the first place. Hitler had a project to confirm the role of Germans as the master “Aryan” race in Europe, and hated the Jews as a dangerous rival elite. Who now has such a project? Certainly not a Franco-African humorist! Hitler is not coming back, nor is Napoleon Bonaparte, nor is Attila the Hun.

Constantly recalling the Shoah, in articles, movies, news items, as well as at school, far from preventing anything, can create a morbid fascination with “identities”. It fosters “victim rivalries”. This fascination can lead to unanticipated results. Some 330 schools in Paris bear plaques commemorating the Jewish children who were deported to Nazi concentration camps. How do little Jewish children today react to that? Do they find it reassuring?

This may be useful to the State of Israel, which is currently undertaking a three-year program to encourage more of France’s 600,000 Jews to leave France and go to Israel. In 2013, the number of Aliyah from France rose to more than 3,000, a trend attributed by the European Jewish Press to the “French Jewish community’s increasingly Zionistic mentality, particularly among young French Jews, and a manifestation of efforts by the Jewish Agency, the Israel government, and other non-profits to cultivate Jewish identity in France.”

“If this year we have seen Aliyah from France go from under 2,000 to more than 3,000, I look forward to seeing that number grow to 6,000 and beyond in the near future, as we connect ever more young people to Jewish life and to Israel,” declared Natan Sharansky, Chairman of the Executive of the Jewish Agency for Israel. Surely, one way to encourage Aliyah is to scare Jews with the threat of anti-Semitism, and claiming that Dieudonné’s numerous fans are Nazis in disguise is a good way to do this.
But as for Jews who want to live in France, is it really healthy to keep reminding Jewish children that, if they are not wary, their fellow citizens might one day want to hoard them onto freight trains and ship them all to Auschwitz? I have heard people saying privately that this permanent reminder is close to child abuse.

Someone who thinks that way is Jonathan Moadab, a 25-year-old independent journalist who was interviewed by Soren Seelow. Moadab is both anti-Zionist and a practicing Jew. As a child he was taken to tour Auschwitz. He told Seelow that that living with that “victim indoctrination” had engendered a sort of “pre-traumatic stress syndrome”.

“Dieudonné’s jokes about the Shoah, like his song Shoananas, are not aimed at the Shoah itself,” he says, “but at the exploitation of the Holocaust described by the American political writer Norman Finkelstein.”

On January 22, on his web site Agence Info Libre, Jonathan Moadab openly called for “separating the State from the Holocaust religion”. Moadab cites professor Yeshayahu Leibowitz as the first to point out the many ways in which the Holocaust has become the new Jewish religion. If that is so, everyone has the right to practice the religion of the Shoah. But should it be the official religion of France?

French politicians never cease celebrating the “laicité”, the secularism, of the French Republic. Interior Minister Manuel Valls, who proclaims his own devotion to Israel, because his wife is Jewish, recently called the Shoah the “sanctuary that cannot be profaned”. Moadab concludes that if the Shoah is a sanctuary, then the Holocaust is a religion, and the Republic is not secular.

Changes are taking place in the attitude of young people in France. This change is not due to Dieudonné. It is due to the passage of time. The Holocaust became the religion of the West at a time when the generation after World War II was in the mood to blame their parents. Now we are with the grandchildren, or great-grandchildren, of those who lived through that period, and they want to look ahead. No law can stop this.

*As described in my earlier article, the “quenelle” is a vulgar gesture roughly meaning “up yours”, with one hand placed at the top of the other arm stretched down to signify “how far up” this is to be. Using the name of a French dumpling, Dieudonné started using this gesture in a wholly different context years ago, as an expression of defiance, incredulity or indifference.

Nasser Kandil: On Geneva 2 and Lebanon's Political crisis

Humanitarian deal reached on war-hit Homs, people return to embattled Aleppo

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Free Syrian Army fighters prepare to launch a mortar towards fighters from the Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) from a street in the Kadi Askar neighbourhood of Aleppo, after seizing it from the ISIL, activists said, January 7, 2014.(Reuters / Abdalrhman Ismail)
Free Syrian Army fighters prepare to launch a mortar towards fighters from the Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) from a street in the Kadi Askar neighbourhood of Aleppo, after seizing it from the ISIL, activists said, January 7, 2014.(Reuters / Abdalrhman Ismail)
Jan 27, 2014, RT.com
[watch video here]
As the Syrian government and opposition in Geneva have taken a step towards resolving the humanitarian crisis in besieged Homs, RT visited another major battleground, Aleppo, to see people returning to devastated homes in areas liberated by the army.
The slowly-progressing talks between the Syrian government and the external opposition in Geneva have yielded their first result. The sides have reached an agreement that would see humanitarian aid enter the besieged city of Homs, and would allow women and children to leave its war-ravaged areas.
What makes the deal dubious, however, is that it’s not yet clear how it will be implemented on the ground. Currently, the Syrian government is promising – voiced on Sunday by Deputy Foreign Minister Faisal Mekdad – that women and children can leave Homs safely. Another question is how rebels inside the city besieged by the army will react.
If the armed terrorists in Homs allow women and children to leave the old city of Homs, we will allow them every access. Not only that, we will provide them with shelter, medicines and all that is needed,” he said, as cited by Reuters. “We are ready to allow any humanitarian aid to enter into the city through the arrangements made with the UN.”
Much will now depend on whether the external opposition present in Geneva will be able to influence the rebels in the city of Homs itself. Opposition activists have so far said that rebels have demanded a complete end to the blockade, as opposed to just letting some civilians out. Besides, an online video showed demonstrators with Islamist flags denouncing the Geneva talks as “treachery”.
Homs, a major battleground in the center of Syria, dubbed by the opposition as the “Capital of the Revolution”, was largely recaptured by government forces last year. However, parts of army-blockaded Homs, including the old city, remain under rebel control.
Syrian officials have meanwhile said the ceasefire plan for Aleppo, another key war-zone, could be used as a model for other parts of Syria, where the conflict between President Bashar Assad’s government and opposition forces has claimed over 100,000 lives.
People have recently started returning to their homes in Aleppo, after government forces recaptured large parts of the town from militants.
RT’s Maria Finoshina has flown on the first civil airplane to land at Aleppo international airport to discover the city slowly rising from the ashes of war.
This flight means the return of life to this airport – and this area,” Basem Mansour, the director of the airport, said, adding that regular flights were due to start in a month’s time.
From the airport, Finoshina went to a village outside Aleppo, which has just come back under government control. 14 thousand residents fled after the rebels’ attack. One third of the population has now returned to discover houses either destroyed or looted.
It all depends on how lucky you are,” a resident tells RT. “Our home was almost intact, but they stole everything.”
A pregnant woman is optimistic, even though she found her home was completely destroyed.
We now have nothing,” she says. “But God gave us a baby, and that will give us power to build everything from scratch. We are ready.
As security is still fragile in the village, the army is patrolling the area, calling on the locals to get involved. The city of Aleppo itself, where the RT crew goes next, looks unexpectedly secure.
To be honest we are a bit surprised to see what used to be Syria’s biggest business center still so vibrant and actually safe,” Finoshina says. “We even took our flak jackets with us expecting to see clashes in the middle of a completely destroyed city… But don’t be mistaken. This is the western part of the city. The eastern part – you’d better not to go there as no one can guarantee any security for anybody in that part of the city.”
The eastern part of Aleppo is where moderate Free Syrian Army factions are fighting radical Al-Qaeda-affiliated groups for control, while government forces are in a struggle with them both.
We – Syrians – are ready to reconcile with each other,” Mohammad Waheed Akkad, the Aleppo governor tells RT. “And Aleppo is a good place to start with, and to give an example to other regions. But these guys – from Nusra front, from Al Qaeda, they don’t know what they want, but not peace, for sure.”
Militants still control half of the city as well as a large part of northern Syria. That’s the biggest challenge to the ceasefireplan pushed forward by the Syrian government prior to the Geneva peace conference.

RÉSISTANT EN PALESTINE - RAMZY BAROUD

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