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From: Jeffrey Epstein <[email protected]>
To: IM --
Subject: Fwd: January 22 update
Date: Thu, 23 Jan 2014 18:25:04 +0000
Forwarded message
From: Office of Terje Rod-Larsen < IIMI>
Date: Thursday, January 23, 2014
Subject: January 22 update
To:
22 January, 2014
Article 1. NYT
Another Syria Peace Conference
Editorial
Article 2. NYT
WikiLeaks, Drought and Syria
Thomas L. Friedman
Article 3. The Washington Institute
Avoiding Assad's Forced Solution to the Syria Crisis
Andrew J. Tabler
Article 4. Now Lebanon
Does the US seek an Arab-Iranian "equilibrium?"
Hussein Ibish
Article 5. The Christian Science Monitor
As Egypt squeezes Gaza, Hamas looks increasingly
cornered
Christa Case Bryant, Ahmed Aldabba
Article 6. The Daily Beast
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At Davos 2014, the Gods Of Mischief Rule
Christopher Dickey
Article 7.
New York Review of Books
Iran: A Good Deal Now in Danger
Jessica T. Mathews
Article I.
NYT
Another Syria Peace Conference
Editorial
JAN. 21, 2014 -- Few peace conferences have been set up amid the
unrelenting pessimism that surrounds the talks involving Syria that open
Wednesday in Switzerland. But while a peace agreement is unlikely to be
reached anytime soon, the meeting can still produce useful results. That has
to be the approach of the conveners, including the United States, Russia
and the United Nations. Crucial early goals should include a cease-fire and
the delivery of humanitarian assistance to millions of desperate civilians.
There were some shaky moments before the conference, which has taken
months to arrange, even got started, not least when the United Nations
secretary general, Ban Ki-moon, issued a last-minute invitation for Iran to
attend, then rescinded it after strong objections from America; from Saudi
Arabia, Iran's regional rival; and from the Syrian opposition. The United
States has said that Iran could not participate without publicly accepting a
2012 communiqué that is the basis of the conference and stipulates that the
goal is a transitional administration by "mutual consent" of the Assad
government and the opposition.
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In the view of the United States, this means that President Bashar al-Assad
would be replaced, although Assad government officials and his Alawite
sect could be part of the new structure. Iran has refused to accept any
preconditions.
Just how the invitation from the United Nations was fumbled is unclear,
but it is unfortunate that some diplomatic solution could not have been
found to include Iran, which along with Russia is Syria's main ally,
providing President Assad with arms and other military support. In an
interview with The New York Times and Time magazine last month, the
Iranian foreign minister, Mohammad Javad Zarif, said Iran would not be an
impediment to a political settlement. "We have every interest in helping the
process in a peaceful direction," he said. "We are satisfied, totally satisfied,
convinced that there is no military solution in Syria and that there is a need
to find a political solution in Syria."
The deaths of thousands of civilians have not persuaded Russia and Iran to
break with Mr. Assad or at least pressure him to end the slaughter and
cruelty against civilians. Iran might have ensured itself a seat at the peace
conference if it had promised to suspend arms deliveries while negotiations
were underway or persuaded Mr. Assad to call a cease-fire. And there are
good reasons for Russia and Iran to play a constructive role. The civil war
has drawn affiliates of Al Qaeda and other Sunni extremists to the Syrian
battlefield, and these could eventually be a threat to Shiite-led Iran as well
as Russia, which is fighting extremists in the Caucasus and worrying about
attacks during the Winter Olympics in Sochi next month.
Mr. Zarif acknowledged this problem generally, asserting that "the
continuation of this tragedy in Syria can only provide the best breeding
ground for extremists who use this basically as a justification, as a
recruiting climate, in order to wage the same type of activity in other parts
of this region."
The peace conference is already providing a service by refocusing attention
on the savagery of the war, now in its third year. On Monday, a team of
legal and forensic experts commissioned by the government of Qatar, a
main sponsor of the Syrian opposition, said that thousands of photographs
— apparently smuggled out of Syria by a defecting military police
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photographer — showed scarred, emaciated corpses that offered "direct
evidence" of mass torture by Syrian government forces.
Human Rights Watch and Amnesty International have also accused
opposition forces, as well as the government, of human rights abuses. In
all, more than 100,000 Syrians are believed to have been killed in the war,
many by government forces that have bombed cities and deprived civilians
of food and other essential needs. It is well past time to say "enough" to
more civilian deaths — and exactly the right time for a cease-fire and
secure deliveries of humanitarian supplies.
Anicle 2.
NYT
WikiLeaks, Drought and Syria
Thomas L. Friedman
JAN. 21, 2014 -- In the 1970s, I got both my bachelor's and master's
degrees in modern Middle East studies, and I can assure you that at no time
did environmental or climate issues appear anywhere in the syllabi of my
courses. Today, you can't understand the Arab awakenings — or their
solutions — without considering climate, environment and population
stresses.
I've been reporting on the connection between the Syrian drought and the
uprising there for a Showtime documentary that will air in April, but
recently our researchers came across a WikiLeaks cable that brilliantly
foreshadowed how environmental stresses would fuel the uprising. Sent on
Nov. 8, 2008, from the U.S. Embassy in Damascus to the State
Department, the cable details how, in light of what was a devastating
Syrian drought — it lasted from 2006-10 — Syria's U.N. food and
agriculture representative, Abdullah bin Yehia, was seeking drought
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assistance from the U.N. and wanted the U.S. to contribute. Here are some
key lines:
■ "The U.N. Office for Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs launched an
appeal on September 29 requesting roughly $20.23 million to assist an
estimated one million people impacted by what the U.N. describes as the
country's worst drought in four decades."
■ "Yehia proposes to use money from the appeal to provide seed and
technical assistance to 15,000 small-holding farmers in northeast Syria in
an effort to preserve the social and economic fabric of this rural,
agricultural community. If UNFAO efforts fail, Yehia predicts mass
migration from the northeast, which could act as a multiplier on social and
economic pressures already at play and undermine stability."
■ "Yehia does not believe that the [government of Bashar al-Assad] will
allow any Syrian citizen to starve. ... However, Yehia told us that the
Syrian minister of agriculture ... stated publicly that economic and social
fallout from the drought was `beyond our capacity as a country to deal
with.' What the U.N. is trying to combat through this appeal, Yehia says, is
the potential for `social destruction' that would accompany erosion of the
agricultural industry in rural Syria. This social destruction would lead to
political instability."
■ "Without direct assistance, Yehia predicts that most of these 15,000
small-holding farmers would be forced to depart Al Hasakah Province to
seek work in larger cities in western Syria. Approximately 100,000
dependents — women, children and the elderly or infirm — would be left
behind to live in poverty, he said. Children would be likely to be pulled
from school, he warned, in order to seek a source of income for families
left behind. In addition, the migration of 15,000 unskilled laborers would
add to the social and economic pressures presently at play in major Syrian
cities. A system already burdened by a large Iraqi refugee population may
not be able to absorb another influx of displaced persons, Yehia explained,
particularly at this time of rising costs, growing dissatisfaction of the
middle class, and a perceived weakening of the social fabric and security
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structures that Syrians have come to expect and — in some cases — rely
7,
on.
Yehia was prophetic. By 2010, roughly one million Syrian farmers, herders
and their families were forced off the land into already overpopulated and
underserved cities. These climate refugees were crowded together with one
million Iraqi war refugees. The Assad regime failed to effectively help any
of them, so when the Arab awakenings erupted in Tunisia and Egypt,
Syrian democrats followed suit and quickly found many willing recruits
from all those dislocated by the drought.
But also consider this: Last May 9, The Times of Israel quoted Israeli
geographer Arnon Soffer as observing that in the past 60 years, the
population in the Middle East has twice doubled. "There is no example of
this anywhere else on earth."
And this: Last March, the International Journal of Climatology published a
study, "Changes in extreme temperature and precipitation in the Arab
region," that found "consistent warming trends since the middle of the 20th
century across the region," manifested in "increasing frequencies of warm
nights, fewer cool days and cool nights."
And then consider this: Syria's government couldn't respond to a
prolonged drought when there was a Syrian government. So imagine what
could happen if Syria is faced by another drought after much of its
infrastructure has been ravaged by civil war.
And, finally, consider this: "In the future, who will help a country like
Syria when it gets devastated by its next drought if we are in a world where
everyone is dealing with something like a Superstorm Sandy," which alone
cost the U.S. $60 billion to clean up? asks Joe Romm, founder of
ClimateProgress.org.
So to Iran and Saudi Arabia, who are funding the proxy war in Syria
between Sunnis and Shiites/Alawites, all I can say is that you're fighting
for control of a potential human/ecological disaster zone. You need to be
working together to rebuild Syria's resiliency, and its commons, not
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destroying it. I know that in saying this I am shouting into a dust storm.
But there is nothing else worth saying.
Article 3.
The Washington Institute
Avoiding Assad's Forced Solution to the
Syria Crisis
\ilcircw J. Tabler
January 21, 2014 -- The UN retraction of Iran's invitation to this week's
Syria peace talks in Montreux, Switzerland, does little if anything to
change the Assad regime's approach to those talks. President Bashar al-
Assad's statements in recent days indicate that he and his backers are
attempting to pressure the United States and the rest of the "London 11"
countries supporting the opposition at the conference -- Britain, France,
Germany, Italy, Turkey, Egypt, Jordan, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, and the United
Arab Emirates. In particular, Damascus hopes to change the framework of
the
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