|
Middle East Chaos |
It has not been a pretty picture in the Middle East
for some time now after the euphoria of the Arab Spring - better still
it is a total mess and certainly not a feather on the cap of any EU,
Russian or Chinese diplomat, especially not for the cap of the US's
Mr.Kerry.
In Libya when one might have thought the mess there could not have gotten
worse, it has. The latest round in the multidimensional chaos that has
prevailed since the overthrow of Muammar Gaddafi was initiated by an
ex-general named Khalifa Hiftar, who was trained in the Soviet Union,
participated as a junior officer in the coup that brought Gaddafi to
power in 1969, later broke with the Libyan dictator, and lived for years
in the Northern Virginia suburbs of Washington, DC, where he apparently
also became a U.S. citizen.
Hiftar returned to Libya after Gaddafi was ousted. Now he has put
together a force he calls the “Libyan National Army” and aims at
removing the interim parliament in Tripoli.
So probably also for Libya there is a new dictatorship in the making?
Israel and the Palestinians were back to square one in the
peace process last Friday after the Jewish state torpedoed US-sponsored
talks in response to a Fatah-Hamas reconciliation deal.
Israeli
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu set the tone, telling the BBC that
Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas could "have peace with Israel or a
pact with Hamas (but) he can't have both".
"As long as
I'm prime minister of Israel, I will never negotiate with a Palestinian
government that is backed by Hamas terrorists that are calling for our
liquidation," he added.
In Syria tyrant
Bashar Assad may have to stay temporarily as Syrian president despite
the death toll in the country’s civil war heading higher than the number
killed in Iraq, Tony Blair said recently.
The former Prime Minister branded the situation in Syria an
“unmitigated disaster” and insisted the West should intervene in such
conflicts.
“We are now in a position where both Assad staying and
the Opposition taking over seem bad options,” he said in a speech at
Bloomberg HQ in central London.
“Repugnant though it may seem, the
only way forward is to conclude the best agreement possible even if it
means in the interim President Assad stays for a period.”
Egypt :
In a statement dripping with cynicism, the White House said that Obama
was “deeply troubled” by the recent mass death sentences in Egypt.
“While judicial independence is a vital part of democracy, this
verdict cannot be reconciled with Egypt’s obligations under
international human rights law,” the White House statement read. It
appealed to Sisi and his fellow military rulers to “take a stand against
this illogical action.”
Whom do they think they’re kidding? The niceties of “judicial
independence” are hardly an issue in Egypt.
The hanging judge
Youssef—popularly known as “the butcher”—was installed in a special
court created by the junta to do precisely what he is doing. Moreover,
the draconian sentences have a very clear logic: they are an act of
state terror designed to intimidate the Egyptian masses.
The statement continued: “Since the January 25 Revolution, the
Egyptian people have aspired to be represented by a government that
rules justly, respects their dignity, and provides economic
opportunities. The United States supports these aspirations and wants
Egypt’s transition to succeed.”
It seems hardly a coincidence that these mass death sentence came
only days after Washington approved the provision of 10 Apache attack
helicopters on top of some $650 million in military aid already approved
for the Egyptian junta this fiscal year.
This is half of what the
administration wanted to supply to the country’s repressive forces, the
other half being held up by laws restricting aid to regimes brought to
power through military coups.
Obviously the helicopter deal was correctly interpreted by the Egyptian junta as a green light to escalate its brutal crackdown.
All
this disaster unfortunately is only the top of the Iceberg when one
looks at the total Middle East picture. Maybe only one word to describe
this is: total chaos .
EU-Digest