Israel to ‘Suspend’ West Bank Annexation After Historic Deal with UAE, Announces Trump

The agreement was sealed in a phone call on Thursday between Trump, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Abu Dhabi’s Crown Prince Sheikh Mohammed Bin Zayed.

Washington: Israel and the United Arab Emirates reached a historic deal on Thursday that will lead to a full normalisation of diplomatic relations between the two Middle Eastern nations in an agreement that US President Donald Trump helped broker.

Under the agreement, Israel has agreed to suspend applying sovereignty to areas of the West Bank that it has been discussing annexing, senior White House officials told Reuters.

The deal was the product of lengthy discussions between Israel, the UAE and the United States that accelerated recently, White House officials said.

The agreement was sealed in a phone call on Thursday between Trump, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Abu Dhabi’s Crown Prince Sheikh Mohammed Bin Zayed.

“HUGE breakthrough today! Historic Peace Agreement between our two GREAT friends, Israel and the United Arab Emirates,” Trump wrote on Twitter.


In the White House Oval Office, Trump said discussions between the two leaders had sometimes been tense. He said similar deals are being discussed with other countries in the region. A signing ceremony including delegations from Israel and the United Arab Emirates will be held at the White House in the coming weeks, Trump added.

“Everybody said this would be impossible,” Trump said. “After 49 years, Israel and the United Arab Emirates will fully normalize their diplomatic relations. They exchange embassies and ambassadors and begin cooperation across the border.”

The U.S. officials described the agreement, to be known as the Abraham Accords, as the first of its kind since Israel and Jordan signed a peace treaty in 1994. It also gives Trump a foreign policy success as he seeks re-election on Nov. 3.

Netanyahu, in his first comment on the deal, said on Twitter it is “a historic day for the state of Israel.”

Abu Dhabi’s crown prince said on Twitter that an agreement had been reached and that it would halt further Israeli annexation of Palestinian territories.

“During a call with President Trump and Prime Minister Netanyahu, an agreement was reached to stop further Israeli annexation of Palestinian territories. The UAE and Israel also agreed to cooperation and setting a roadmap towards establishing a bilateral relationship,” he said.

White House officials said Trump senior adviser Jared Kushner, U.S. Ambassador to Israel David Friedman and Middle East envoy Avi Berkowitz were deeply involved in negotiating the deal, as well as Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and White House national security adviser Robert O’Brien.

A joint statement issued by the three nations said the three leaders had “agreed to the full normalization of relations between Israel and the United Arab Emirates.”

“This historic diplomatic breakthrough will advance peace in the Middle East region and is a testament to the bold diplomacy and vision of the three leaders and the courage of the United Arab Emirates and Israel to chart a new path that will unlock the great potential in the region,” the statement said.

Brian Hook, the U.S. State Department’s lead official on Iran, said the agreement amounted to a “nightmare” for Iran in its efforts against Israel in the region.

Trump said, “This deal is a significant step towards building a more peaceful, secure and prosperous Middle East. Now that the ice has been broken, I expect more Arab and Muslim countries will follow the United Arab Emirates’ lead …. and normalize relations with Israel.”

“We are already discussing this with other nations, very powerful, very good nations that want to see peace in the Middle East so you will probably see others of these,” Trump added. “Things are happening that I can’t talk about, but they’re extremely positive.”

Delegations from Israel and the United Arab Emirates will meet in the coming weeks to sign bilateral agreements regarding investment, tourism, direct flights, security, telecommunications and other issues, the statement said.

The two countries are expected soon to exchange ambassadors and embassies.

The statement said that as “a result of this diplomatic breakthrough and at the request of President Trump with the support of the United Arab Emirates, Israel will suspend declaring sovereignty” over areas of the West Bank that were envisioned in the U.S. peace plan unveiled by Trump in January.

The agreement envisions giving Muslims greater access to the Al-Aqsa Mosque in the Old City of Jerusalem by allowing them to fly from Abu Dhabi to Tel Aviv, White House officials said.

The joint statement said the United Arab Emirates and Israel will immediately expand and accelerate cooperation regarding the treatment of and the development of a vaccine for the novel coronavirus amid the pandemic.

(Reuters)

Ein Rashash: A Typical West Bank Morning Under Illegal Israeli Occupation

Things have changed in Rashshash since violent settlers attacked the police – first on November 7, when the police halted construction at an illegal outpost called Ma’oz Esther.

Editors’ note: With the Trump administration reversing the US’s position and declaring that Israeli settlements in occupied Palestinian territory are not a violation of international law, we are publishing this account by two Israeli peace activists of the daily impact that this illegal settlement has on the lives of the Palestinian people.

We are three – Guy, Nina and me. We reach Rashshash with the dawn. Tea is served. How are things? “Settlers at our throat every day.”

Photo: David Shulman, 2019

Ra’id is already out on the hills with his herd. We set off to join him, crossing the wadi, then climbing the steep slope. Here is a young boy on his donkey, coming home. “Good morning,” we say. “Careful,” he says, “they have been beating people up.” He’s scared.

Photo: David Shulman, 2019

6:30. Guy calls the army “war room” that is situated not far away. He speaks to the duty officer in a new tone. These days, soldiers and police may be a little more amenable to our phone calls. “My name is Guy Hircefeld, I’m a human rights activist. We are at Rashshash with the Palestinian shepherds. Judging from the last few days, there is a real possibility of a clash with settlers from the outpost that calls itself ‘Angels of Peace.’ I suggest you send some soldiers now.”

Photo: David Shulman, 2019

Things have changed here, a little,  since violent settlers began attacking the police – first on November 7, when the police halted construction at an illegal outpost called Ma’oz Esther, not far from ‘Ein Rashshash; then this past weekend, when settlers in Yitzhar in the northern West Bank wounded three policemen who came to arrest a fugitive settler banned from being there.

Yitzhar is one of the more violent places on the planet, as its Palestinian neighbors can tell you. I know it from the days when settler thugs drove out the entire population of the adjacent village of Yanun, and we brought the villagers back and stayed with them for weeks to keep them safe. This time, on Sunday, two hundred Yitzhar settlers fought the police with stones, bottles of paint, and whatever else came to hand.*

Also read: Illegal Outposts and Struggles for Water: A Day in Palestine

But no soldiers come to Rashshash so early, and ten minutes after that call we see three settlers from the outpost and their herd of sheep coming toward us. One of them is on horseback. He rides off to wreak havoc with another herd, closer to the Rashshash tents. The other two – they are adolescents, maybe 15 or 16, religious, twisted fringes flapping on their thighs, sun-caps instead of skull-caps, long ear-locks, cellphones – stride straight into the Palestinian herd, scattering it in all directions. They seem indifferent to their own herd, left far behind – the main thing is to terrorise the Palestinians, sheep and shepherd. Thus: chaos.

Settler-shepherds of the “Angels of Peace” outpost and elsewhere in the West Bank straightforwardly assert that they herd sheep in order to grab land.

They’re making a lot of noise, screaming at the sheep, and one of them – we’ll call him Goldilocks, because he has very long blonde hair, like a hippie of yore, rather out of context – has a loudspeaker that’s blaring raucous music, and waving the loudspeaker in his hands he literally starts dancing his way through the herd, enjoying every moment, jumping, twirling, hopping, running from stone to stone. The sheep don’t like it.

Both the settler boys are also yelling at us. Ra’id and the remnants of the herd are fleeing far downslope, toward the Valley. Nina manages to catch up with them and stays close, protecting them, while violence unfurls higher up.

Also read: In Al-Hamme, Palestinian Shepherds Are Being Driven Away

Guy is running after the young thugs, who are still dispersing the sheep; he moves fast, almost beyond belief, because the whole slope is nothing but hard jagged loops of rock and it’s almost impossible not to stumble and fall. I can’t keep up with him, but I’m trying. Then I see, maybe 30 meters away, how Goldilocks smashes into him, the dance now reduced to its vital core of hate.

I rush toward him, trying hard not to lose my footing on the rocks, and I see Goldilocks kick Guy’s feet out from under him as he topples Guy onto a long slab of stone, and for the three or four minutes it takes me to reach them Goldilocks is pummeling Guy with his fists and kicking him without pause, and Guy is caught but not hitting back, until finally Goldilocks lets go and backs off.

I wish I had used those minutes to photograph it. It would have made a difference.

Guy gets to his feet. He is bleeding from the nose, and he has taken bad hits on his back and side. Photo: Still from video by David Shulman

Goldilocks is yelling loudly, something he thinks everyone, ovine and human, should know: “Guy attacked me.” He calls his friend, still busy with the sheep, and he calls Elchanan, the big guy in the outpost, with his happy news. Over and over again. “You’re the one who attacked,” I say, “I saw it all.”

“You’re a liar,” says Goldilocks. Photo: Still from video by David Shulman

“You’re the liar,” says I. So it goes. Guy’s phone rings. It’s his daughter. “Abba, can you pick me up today after school?”

Then, from the mouths of these not-yet-men, maybe never-to-be-men, worthy of the name, the usual curses and insults and vicious words are spit out in a steady stream. Always the same trite, repetitive, infinitely impoverished thoughts, if you can call them thoughts. After a while, disgusted, furious, I say to them: “Have you ever heard that God said, ‘Thou shalt not steal’? It’s in the text.” “Oh,” one says, “so you agree that these are the texts.”

Also read: Photo Essay: A Yom Kippur Meditation

“Of course,” says I, “they are texts. I know them a little. You and I could compete to see who knows them better.” For a moment, he’s off balance. Only a moment. “But you just select whatever text you happen to like and forget all the others,” says Goldilocks. “You know,” says I, “that sentence about not stealing seems to me unequivocal. Doesn’t require a lot of commentary.” Then I can’t resist adding: “And because you are stealing the land and the livelihood and the lives of these shepherds, who are people just like us, one day—maybe sooner than you think—you won’t be living here. Remember what I told you.” Goldilocks smiles.

Photo: Still from video by Nina Clark

We climb back up over the hills, weary now, though it’s only 7:45, and coming toward us are two army jeeps and one police car. Just an hour late. We tell them what happened. They take our identity cards. They’re not hostile this time, not the soldiers, not the policemen. Elchanan, however, the arch-settler, arrives, and they all shake hands, as usual. They’re friends, sort of. One of the soldiers says to us, “This wouldn’t have happened if you hadn’t come here this morning.” Which must, in some crooked way, be true.

Elchanan, 2018. Photo: Margaret Olin

The shepherds in the tents welcome our return, and they are eager to hear the story. They are sad. Again and again they say, “Mit’asfin—we are sorry.” We tell them we’re OK, it’s all OK, and that if they stand firm over the coming days, things will get better, there will be some quiet. More tea and a rough breakfast of pita, olive oil, tomatoes. I can see our hosts are moved.

Guy recalls the moment—April 21, 2017—when fifteen settlers attacked the Ta’ayush activists at al-‘Auja Foq, Upper ‘Auja, and many were badly hurt, head wound, broken foot, deep hits. Soon after that, there was a demonstration against another new outpost in the northern Valley. At first the ‘Auja Palestinians were hesitating about coming to join us, but then they decided: “If you have lost blood for our sake, we cannot say no to you now.”

Photo: David Shulman, 2019

We drive to the Binyamin police station to file a complaint against Goldilocks. It takes time; it’s cold in the station; we wait. Our pictures aren’t good enough, but there is one eyewitness, me,  whose testimony might count for something. The policewoman takes down Guy’s statement, then mine. Meanwhile, other guests arrive at the station to file a complaint (against Guy).

Also read: In Palestine, Memory is a Living, Haunting Thing

It’s Goldilocks and an obese, wildly unkempt, ugly giant of a settler, maybe some terrible ersatz father? We’ve seen him before. He seems to call the shots at “Angels of Peace.” The waiting room is rife with the intimacy of enmity and struggle. But Goldilocks is looking rather deflated, slouching, sullen, awkward, like a kid lost in the world. Maybe hitting and hurting and screaming and lying don’t really suit him. Maybe it’s not such a fun dance after all, especially when it’s over.

 

Until the next time.

Most photographs and video stills were taken during the activities described in this post. The unidentified photographs were taken in ‘Ein Rashshash in December, 2018, by Margaret Olin.

Margaret Olin teaches visual theory, photography theory and history, visual culture and Jewish visual studies at Yale University. David Shulman is an Indologist and an authority on the languages of India. A Professor Emeritus at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, he is an activist in Ta’ayush, Arab-Jewish Partnership.

This article was originally published on Touching Photographs. Read the original article here.

Israeli Settlements No Longer ‘Inconsistent With International Law’: US

Regarding Israeli settlements as inconsistent with international law “has not advanced the cause of peace,” US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said.


US President Donald Trump’s administration is softening its stance on Israeli settlements in the occupied West Bank, Washington’s top diplomat announced on Monday.

Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said that the government will no longer abide by a 1978 State Department legal opinion that found civilian settlements in occupied territories as “inconsistent with international law.”

“The establishment of Israeli civilian settlements in the West Bank is not, per se, inconsistent with international law,” he said.

“Calling the establishment of civilian settlements inconsistent with international law has not worked. It has not advanced the cause of peace,” he added.

Pompeo said that Washington is not expressing a view on the legality of Israeli settlements or the status of the West Bank, saying that the matter should be left up to Palestinians and Israelis to negotiate. The shift will not prejudge what the status of the West Bank will end up being under any potential peace agreement, he said.

Under Trump’s predecessor, former US President Barack Obama, the UN Security Council passed a resolution demanding an end to the settlements.

EU doubles down on settlement stance

The major shift in US policy sparked anger with Palestinians and drew criticism from the international community, which overwhelmingly considers the settlements illegal.

A spokesman for Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas said the US decision “contradicts totally with international law.”

“The US administration has lost its credibility to play any future role in the peace process,” spokesman Nabil Abu Rdeneh said.

The European Union said that its position on Israeli settlements “is clear and remains unchanged.”

Also read: Expected India to Be More Resilient to US Pressures, Says Iran’s Foreign Minister

“The EU calls on Israel to end all settlement activity, in line with its obligations as an occupying power,” EU foreign policy chief Federica Mogherini said in a statement.

US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo delivers a statement on the Trump administration’s position on Israeli settlements in the occupied West Bank during a news briefing at the State Department in Washington, US, November 18, 2019. Photo: Reuters/Yara Nardi

The Israeli government was dealt a blow over settlements last week when the European Court of Justice ruled that products made in Israeli settlements must be labelled.

Netanyahu praises decision

Shortly after the announcement, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said that the US stance on settlements “rights a historical wrong.”

He also thanked Trump and Pompeo “for their steadfast position supporting truth and justice” as well as calling on other countries “to adopt a similar position” if they hope to advance peace.

The US decision is expected to give a boost to Netanyahu, who has been struggling to remain in power after failing to form a coalition government.

Shortly after the announcement, the US Embassy in Jerusalem issued a travel warning for Jerusalem, the West Bank, and Gaza — saying that those opposed to Pompeo’s announcement may target “US government facilities, US private interests, and US citizens.”

Hopes dwindling for a two-state solution

Monday’s announcement was the latest major move by the Trump administration that could jeopardise Palestinian’s hopes for a two-state solution.

In 2017, Trump recognised Jerusalem as the capital of Israel and formally opened an embassy in the city in 2018. Prior to that, US policy had been that the status of Jerusalem was to be decided by the parties involved in the conflict.

In March this year, Trump moved to recognise Israel’s 1981 annexation of the Golan Heights — a decision that boosted Netanyahu but prompted a sharp response from Syria.

Israel captured the West Bank and East Jerusalem in a 1967 war and quickly began settling the territory. Some 700,000 Israeli settlers currently live in the two areas, which are both claimed by the Palestinians for their state.

Rockets fired from Syria

Early on Tuesday, sirens warning of rocket fire sounded in the Israel-controlled Golan Heights. Israeli military said their missile defense systems brought the projectiles down.

“Four launches were identified from Syria towards Israeli territory which was intercepted by the Israeli air defense systems,” the army said. “No hits on Israeli communities were identified.”

The article was originally published on DWYou can read it here

Oil-Thirsty India and Other Countries Put to Test With Trump’s Impending Iran Sanctions

Sanctions are meant to cripple Iran’s oil-dependent economy and force Tehran to quash not only its nuclear ambitions but also its ballistic missile program and its influence in Syria.

Washington/Singapore: Shortly after US President Donald Trump announced in May he would reimpose sanctions on Iran, the State Department began telling countries around the world the clock was ticking for them to cut oil purchases from the Islamic Republic to zero.

The strategy is meant to cripple Iran‘s oil-dependent economy and force Tehran to quash not only its nuclear ambitions but this time, its ballistic missile program and its influence in Syria.

With just days to go before renewed sanctions take effect November 5, the reality is setting in: three of Iran’s top five customers – India, China, and Turkey – are resisting Washington’s call to end purchases outright, arguing there are not sufficient supplies worldwide to replace them, according to sources familiar with the matter.

Also Read: White House Says It Is Going Extra Lengths to Find Iranian Oil Substitute for India

That pressure, along with worries of a damaging oil price spike, is putting the Trump administration’s hard line to the test and raising the possibility of bilateral deals to allow some buying to continue, according to the sources.

The tension has split the administration into two camps, one led by national security adviser John Bolton, who wants the toughest possible approach, and another by state department officials keen to balance sanctions against preventing an oil price spike that could damage the US and its allies, according to a source briefed by administration officials on the matter.

The global price of oil peaked just below $87 a barrel this month, a four-year high. Because of that concern, the source said, the administration is considering limited waivers for some Iranian customers until Russia and Saudi Arabia add additional supply next year, while limiting what Tehran can do with the proceeds in the meantime.

Revenues from sales could be escrowed for use by Tehran exclusively for humanitarian purposes, the source, who asked not to be named, said – a mechanism more stringent than a similar one imposed on Iran oil purchases during the last round of sanctions under US President Barack Obama.

“If you’re the administration, you’d like to ensure you don’t have a spike in the price. So, you are better off from mid-2019 onwards to aggressively enforce the barrels side of reducing to zero and in the interim aggressively enforcing the revenue side,” the source said.

Such concessions could be problematic for the White House as it seeks stricter terms than under Obama, who along with European allies imposed sanctions that led to an agreement limiting Iran‘s nuclear weapons development.

Also Read: Who Will Rule Donald Trump’s Foreign Policy?

The State Department declined to comment for this story, but the administration has confirmed Washington is considering waivers. US Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin told Reuters that countries will first have to reduce purchases of Iran’s oil by more than the 20% level they did under the previous sanctions.

Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan addresses members of parliament from his ruling AK Party (AKP) during a meeting at the Turkish parliament in Ankara, Turkey

Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan has criticised the sanctions. Credit: REUTERS/Umit Bektas

‘A Bit Unpredictable’

US Treasury and State Department teams have travelled to more than two dozen countries since Trump pulled out of the nuclear deal on May 8, warning companies and countries of the dangers of doing business with Iran.

US allies Japan and South Korea have already ceased importing Iran‘s crude. But the situation is less clear among other, bigger buyers.

Brian Hook, the State Department’s special representative for Iran, and Frank Fannon, State’s top US energy diplomat, most recently met with officials in India, Iran’s No. 2 buyer, in mid-October after a US source said for the first time that the administration was actively considering waivers.

An Indian government source said India told the US delegation that rising energy costs caused by a weak rupee and high oil prices meant zeroing out Iranian purchases was impossible until at least March.

“We have told this to the US, as well as during Brian Hook’s visit,” the source said. “We cannot end oil imports from Iran at a time when alternatives are costly.”

A US diplomat confirmed the discussions, saying limited waivers for India and other countries was possible.

India typically imports over 500,000 barrels per day (bpd) of Iranian oil, but has reduced that level in recent months, according to official data.

Discussions are also underway with Turkey, Iran’s fourth biggest crude buyer, even though Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan and Turkish ministers have openly criticised the sanctions.

An industry source in Turkey familiar with the talks told Reuters the country had cut Iranian imports in half already, and could get to zero, but would prefer to continue some purchases.

Obama’s administration granted a six-month waiver to Turkey, but the source said Turkey expected the Trump administration to impose tougher requirements for obtaining waivers that could potentially cover shorter periods.

“It could be for three months, or they may not get a waiver at all. It is all a bit unpredictable this time, as we understand a lot of things are up to Trump,” the source said.

The situation is least clear in China, Iran’s biggest customer, whose state-owned buyers are also seeking waivers. The country took in between 500,000 and 800,000 bpd from Iran in the past several months, a typical range.

Also Read: It’s Final: Trump Won’t Be India’s Chief Guest at Republic Day Parade

Beijing’s signals to its refiners have been mixed, said the two sources. Last week, Reuters reported Sinopec Group and China National Petroleum Corp (CNPC), the country’s top state-owned refiners, have not placed orders for Iranian oil for November because of concerns about the sanctions.

Joe McMonigle, an energy analyst at Hedgeye in Washington, said he expected the administration would have to accept some level of Iranian oil buying from China, given its consumption.

“Of all the countries, I don’t think they think China is going to zero,” he said.

US State Department’s Fannon is scheduled to travel to Asia in coming days, with a speech in Singapore planned for Oct. 30; an official did not say if Fannon would use the trip to discuss Iran with China.

(Reuters)

Ahead of US Election, Suspected Bombs Target Top Democrats, CNN

All of the targets are frequently maligned by right-wing critics.

Washington/New York: Former US President Barack Obama and former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton were among the targets of suspected package bombs delivered to several high-profile Democrats and CNN in what New York officials on Wednesday branded an act of terrorism.

The suspicious parcels, at least five in all, were intercepted before any reached their intended recipients, including Obama’s attorney general, Eric Holder, and former Central Intelligence Agency Director John Brennan, the FBI said.

None of the packages detonated, and nobody was hurt. There was no immediate claim of responsibility.

But news of the threats heightened tensions in a nation deeply polarised ahead of elections on November 6 that will decide whether Democrats take control of one or both houses of Congress from Republicans and deny President Donald Trump the majority his party now holds in both.

President Trump told a political rally in Wisconsin that his government would conduct “an aggressive investigation.”

“Any acts or threats of political violence are an attack on our democracy itself,” Trump said. “We want all sides to come together in peace and harmony.”

But he said the media has a responsibility “to stop the endless hostility and constant negative and oftentimes false attacks and stories.”

A package containing a “live explosive device” according to police, received at the Time Warner Center which houses the CNN New York bureau, in New York City, U.S. is shown in this handout picture provided October 24, 2018. Credit: CNN/Handout via REUTERS

Five packages

The first package, which turned up on Monday, was addressed to billionaire financier George Soros, a prominent Democratic Party donor and frequent target of right-wing conspiracy theories.

The parcel intended for Holder ended up rerouted to the return address that had been printed on all five packages – the Florida office of US Representative Debbie Wasserman Schultz, who formerly chaired the Democratic National Committee, according to the Federal Bureau of Investigation.

“It is possible that additional packages were mailed to other locations,” the FBI said in a statement on its website.

US Representative Maxine Waters, a veteran Democratic congresswoman from Los Angeles, said her Capitol Hill office also was the target of a suspicious package that “has been referred to the FBI.”

The five other packages confirmed by the FBI in its statement were all described as consisting of a manila envelope with a bubble-wrap interior containing “potentially destructive devices.” Each bore a computer-printed address label and six “Forever” postage stamps, the FBI said.

Other officials said the devices contained in the envelopes were all similar to one found in the mailbox of the Soros home and later detonated by police.

The US Secret Service intercepted packages addressed to Obama at his Washington home and to Clinton, the 2016 Democratic nominee for president, at her home in New York state.

The CNN bureau in New York also received a package addressed to Brennan, who has appeared as an on-air CNN analyst, leading police to evacuate the Time Warner building in a busy Manhattan neighbourhood near Central Park.

“So far the devices have been what appeared to be pipe bombs,” John Miller, the New York City police deputy commissioner for intelligence and counterterrorism, told a news conference.

“This clearly is an act of terror attempting to undermine our free press and leaders of this country through acts of violence,” New York Mayor Bill de Blasio told a news conference.

‘Words matter’

All of the targets are frequently maligned by right-wing critics. Trump has repeatedly criticised CNN as “fake news” and disparaged the mainstream news media as an “enemy of the people.”

“There is a total and complete lack of understanding at the White House about the seriousness of their continued attacks on the media,” CNN President Jeff Zucker said in a statement that was read on CNN. “The president, and especially the White House press secretary, should understand that their words matter. Thus far they have shown no comprehension of that.”

Former President of the US, Barack Obama, attends the Nordic Business Forum in Helsinki, Finland September 27, 2018. Credit: Jussi Nukari/Lehtikuva/via Reuters

US Democratic leaders in Congress said Trump’s call for unity rang “hollow” because of his past statements condoning acts of violence.

“Time and time again, the president has condoned physical violence and divided Americans with his words and his actions,” Senate Democratic Leader Chuck Schumer and House of Representatives top Democrat Nancy Pelosi said in a statement.

Last week, Trump, who has joined other Republicans in accusing Democrats of encouraging “mob” tactics, heaped praise on a Montana congressman who assaulted a reporter in 2017.

“Any guy that can do a body-slam … is my guy,” Trump told supporters at the rally.

Brennan at an event in Austin, Texas on Wednesday also faulted Trump for frequent inflammatory rhetoric, saying the president “too often has helped incite some of these feelings of anger, if not violence, when he points to acts of violence.”

“He should not be beating the tom-toms of anger and animosity and war,” said the former CIA chief, whose security clearance was revoked by Trump after he criticised the president’s summit earlier this year with Russian President Vladimir Putin.

The package to Clinton was found late on Tuesday while the one addressed to Obama was recovered early on Wednesday, both during routine off-site mail screenings, the Secret Service said. Obama and Clinton were not at risk, they said.

The package sent to CNN also contained an envelope of white powder that experts were analysing, Police Commissioner James O’Neill said.

Trump at the Wisconsin rally called attention to “how nice I’m behaving tonight.”

“Have you ever seen this? We’re all behaving very well and hopefully we can keep it that way, right?”

(Reuters)

Republicans Look to Seize on Revived Clinton Email Issue in White House, Congress Races

Clinton has said she is confident the FBI will not find anything problematic and will reach the same conclusion it did in July.

US Speaker of the House Paul Ryan (R-WI) holds a copy of his party's "A Better Way" reform agenda at a news conference on Capitol Hill in Washington, DC on September 29. Credit: Reuters

US Speaker of the House Paul Ryan (R-WI) holds a copy of his party’s ‘A Better Way’ reform agenda at a news conference on Capitol Hill in Washington, DC on September 29. Credit: Reuters

Washington: Republicans are seizing on the FBI’s revived scrutiny of Hillary Clinton‘s handling of government emails, hoping it will hurt not just her presidential hopes but Democrats’ chances of regaining one or both chambers of Congress in next week’s election.

Republican lawmakers are threatening to investigate Clinton from her first day in office if the Democrat is elected president on November 8, following the FBI’s move to review newly discovered emails that might pertain to a previously completed investigation into Clinton‘s use of a private server while she was secretary of state.

After FBI director, James Comey’s announcement last Friday of the latest review, which indicated no wrongdoing on Clinton‘s part, Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump and other Republicans have hammered Clinton as scandal-prone, seeking to renew questions about her integrity.

A Clinton presidency would bog down in “scandal baggage,” US  house of representatives speaker, Paul Ryan, said on Tuesday, adding he was focussed on defending Republican majorities in Congress in the election.

“This is what life with the Clintons looks like. It’s always a scandal one after another, then there’s an investigation,” Ryan, the most senior elected Republican in the country, told Fox News in an interview. “You never know what’s coming next.”

Saying that Clinton would take office “with her scandal baggage,” Ryan added: “I don’t think that’s what the American people want to see.”

Clinton has said she is confident the FBI will not find anything problematic and will reach the same conclusion it did in July when it found no grounds for charges from her use of a private email server.

Opinion polls show Clinton maintaining her lead over Trump, although her advantage has narrowed slightly since early last week. The effect of Comey’s news on voters’ support is not yet clear.

The University of Virginia’s centre for politics said this week that several key states, including Arizona, Florida and Ohio, were now considered “toss up,” having earlier been classified as leaning Democratic, saying the races had been tightening regardless of any “Comey Effect.”

“If Comey’s decision results in Republicans holding onto the Senate and losing fewer House seats because he has invigorated their ‘checks and balances’ argument, we will also attribute this to the Comey Effect,” the center’s Larry Sabato and his colleagues wrote.

‘Saving house majority’

Ryan maintained the arms-length posture towards Trump that he adopted after a 2005 video emerged last month in which the New York businessman was heard boasting about groping women.

The Wisconsin Republican said he voted for Trump in early voting last week, but that his position had not changed and that he had no plans to campaign with his party’s nominee, instead focussing on maintaining Republicans‘ control of the house.

“My focus personally right now is saving our house majority. I’m going to Indiana, Michigan, New York and Virginia today to fight for House Republicans,” Ryan told Fox.

While Republicans appear poised to keep control of the house, the race for the senate remains evenly matched, according to an average of polls by RealClearPolitics.

Some conservative members of the Republican caucus in the house, unhappy with Ryan’s treatment of Trump and his handling of other issues on Capitol Hill, have questioned whether he should continue as speaker after the election.

“We’re all focussed on beating Democrats on November 8. All the rest of this stuff will sort itself out,” Ryan told Fox News. “I’m very confident where I stand with our members.”

Republican US Senator John Cornyn called on Tuesday for Attorney General Loretta Lynch, a Barack Obama appointee, to intervene over the Clinton email probe. “AG Lynch has authority to unravel Clinton email mess by appointing a special counsel who can convene an impartial grand jury,” Cornyn wrote on Twitter.

Such a move would all but guarantee that controversy over Clinton‘s emails would simmer into 2017 and perhaps beyond, potentially tying up her agenda if she were elected to the White House. Some Republican senators have already also vowed to block any hearing on Clinton‘s potential Supreme Court justice nominees to fill the court’s current vacancy.

Republican House Oversight Committee chairman, Jason Chaffetz, told the Washington Post last week he had years’ worth of potential material that could be used to investigate Clinton.

California Republican Darrell Issa, a house judiciary committee member, told Fox Business Network late on Monday: “I suspect there will be more hearings” following the latest email probe.

(Reuters)

Hillary Clinton: A Hawk in the Wings

After a mere eight years in which diplomacy narrowly edged out militarism, the foreign policy elite rallying around Clinton has forgotten the lessons of the George W. Bush era.

After a mere eight years in which diplomacy narrowly edged out militarism, the foreign policy elite rallying around Clinton has forgotten the lessons of the George W. Bush era.

US Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton speaks during an event at the New York University Leonard N. Stern School of Business in New York on July 24, 2015. Credits: Reuters

US Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton speaks during an event at the New York University Leonard N. Stern School of Business in New York on July 24, 2015. Credits: Reuters

When Barack Obama was running for office in 2008, he was determined to redirect US military efforts away from the “bad war” in Iraq and toward the “good war” in Afghanistan. This commitment to extricate the US military from the dismal aftermath of a botched exercise in regime change earned Obama the exaggerated designation of “peace candidate.”

Jump ahead eight years and listen to how history rhymes. Today, the Obama administration is reluctant to pour more resources into a failed regime change effort in Syria and far more intent on confronting the ISIS in the battle for Mosul and, ultimately its capital of Raqqa. Once again, the “good” war competes for attention with the “bad” war.

Meanwhile, the candidate that challenged Obama as too naïve and peace-loving back in 2008 is poised to succeed him as president. Once again, she has staked out a more hawkish position. And this time she has a large chunk of the foreign policy elite behind her. As Greg Jaffe wrote last week in the Washington Post:

In the rarefied world of the Washington foreign policy establishment, President Obama’s departure from the White House – and the possible return of a more conventional and hawkish Hillary Clinton – is being met with quiet relief.

The Republicans and Democrats who make up the foreign policy elite are laying the groundwork for a more assertive American foreign policy, via a flurry of reports shaped by officials who are likely to play senior roles in a potential Clinton White House.

The foreign policy elite is mercurial and amnesiac. It wasn’t that long ago that this elite expressed not-so-quiet relief at George W. Bush’s departure from the White House and the return of a more conventional and dovish Barack Obama. And what of the more assertive policy of Hillary Clinton? Now that the truly apocalyptic threat of Donald Trump is receding, the lesser catastrophes of a Clinton administration beckon: perhaps Libya II or an expanded role in Yemen.

Still, as Jaffe points out, plenty of Obama’s foreign policy advisors continue to warn of the considerable risks of greater US military involvement in the region. And, as Josh Rogin suggested this week in his Post column, even Clinton’s Middle East advisors are divided on this question. So, as it turns out, the foreign policy establishment has not quite established its position.

The headlines are full of the ongoing tragedy of Aleppo and the upcoming showdown in Mosul. But then there’s the battle that determines the battle. Forget the inanities of Donald Trump for a few moments to consider what’s taking place behind the scenes. The latest skirmish over the future of US foreign policy in the Middle East is about to begin.

Is there still a chance to influence the trajectory of the hawk as she leaves behind the corpses of her challengers and wings her way to the White House?

No good solutions

It’s remotely possible that the US and its allies if they’d acted quickly and with maximum power, could have helped to dislodge Syrian leader Bashar al-Assad during the Arab Spring by funding militias on the ground and providing them with air support.

However, even if the Obama administration had embraced such a strategy, which then secretary of state Hillary Clinton supported, Assad and his allies might have fought back to achieve the same kind of stalemate that prevails in Syria today. Or, if Assad had fallen, Syria might have descended into the same kind of maelstrom that has enveloped Libya. The cautionary example of Iraq, a truly poisonous gift from the George W. Bush administration, no doubt helped to stay Obama’s hand.

The options on offer today are no better than in 2012. The Obama administration backed a CIA plan to arm several thousand “moderate” rebels to fight their way to power in Syria, and the CIA wants to increase the flow of weaponry. At best, these rebels have managed to achieve a punishing stalemate. At worst, as one unidentified US official told the Washington Post, the units are “not doing any better on the battlefield, they’re up against a more formidable adversary, and they’re increasingly dominated by extremists.” Sending more weapons for a ground offensive wouldn’t do much since the conflict is waged most effectively at the moment by air. Providing more sophisticated anti-aircraft weapons to the rebels would risk opposition from Turkey and escalation by Russia.

Hillary Clinton, meanwhile, has proposed a “no-fly zone” in northern Syria that would presumably create “safe havens” for Syrians fleeing the conflict zones and facilitate humanitarian relief to those stuck in places like Aleppo. For Americans weary of a conflict that has killed hundreds of thousands of Syrians and turned millions into refugees, such a proposal has a certain appeal. Finally, the US would be doing something robust to increase the peace.

But such a zone, as Clinton herself has admitted, is no pacifist solution. It would “kill a lot of Syrians”, she said back in 2013, and draw both the US and NATO more deeply into the military conflict. And then there’s the problem of World War III when US planes start shooting down Russian bombers. Ben Rhodes listed the Obama administration’s reasons for opposing such a zone:

If you had an area of geography in Syria where planes couldn’t fly over it, people would still be killing each other on the ground. ISIL doesn’t have planes, so that doesn’t solve the ISIL problem. They would still be able to massacre people on the ground. And we would have to devote an enormous amount of our resources – which are currently devoted to finding ISIL and killing them wherever they are – to maintaining this no-fly zone.

A third option would be to focus less on Assad in Syria and more on the ISIS, which has emerged as Obama’s preferred strategy. But that plan has its own problems. The administration has emphasised the role of Iraqi forces in liberating their own city of Mosul. But the campaign relies heavily on US air strikes as well as the participation of half of the 5,000 American troops that are still on the ground in Iraq. The recapture of Mosul, even if successful, could drag on for many months, and the ISIS is not the kind of entity that sues for peace.

There will be no “mission accomplished” moment for the Obama administration or its successor. Returning to its stateless mode if and when Raqqa falls, ISIS could prove even more dangerous for the US and its allies as the terrorist outfit redirects its energies toward inflicting pain on its distant tormenters.

Clinton and the meatheads

The Obama administration, for all its use of military force over the last eight years, at least has acknowledged the limited utility of that force. The president has time and again said that military intervention should not be the first tool deployed from the national security toolbox. Despite all the “just war” realism he included in his Nobel Peace Prize speech, Obama has pushed back against his more gung-ho advisors, including Clinton, who have clung to the notion that the US military can determine facts on the ground.

Like Donald Trump, the foreign policy elite in Washington yearns to be unshackled. After a mere eight years in which diplomacy narrowly edged out militarism, this elite has forgotten the lessons of the George W. Bush era. Historically, this is no surprise. John Kenneth Galbraith once said, “The foreign policy elite was always the world’s biggest collection of meatheads.” As an economist, Galbraith knew a meathead when he saw one. Such meatheads are doomed to repeat the history that they didn’t understand even as they were living through it.

It’s relatively easy to point out the flaws in the various options available to the Obama administration in Syria and Iraq. In order to preserve the better parts of the Obama legacy – the nuclear deal with Iran, the elevation of diplomacy, the willingness to lead from behind – what can be done short of cordoning off the entire Middle East and retreating into a fortress of solitude?

First of all, the next administration should widen its engagement with Iran beyond the narrow focus on nuclear issues. Any sustainable solution in Syria and Iraq will require the involvement of Iran – the posturing of the recent Centre for American Progress report on US policy in the Middle East notwithstanding. Pursuing economic and political engagement with Tehran must include a place at the table for the Rouhani administration in negotiations on Iraq and Syria. It’s time to stop complaining about Iranian “meddling” and instead take advantage of the country’s cross-border influence.

The US also has to rebuild a working relationship with Russia. I’m no fan of Vladimir Putin, and I’ve devoted several columns to what I find objectionable in Russian policy in Ukraine, Syria and elsewhere. But if the US could negotiate important agreements with the Soviet Union during the Cold War, surely we can find a modus operandi with the current residents of the Kremlin. Finding common ground in the Middle East can have additional spillover benefits for arms control and perhaps even reducing tensions in Eastern Europe.

Regime change in Syria is a mirage at the moment. Assad is not going anywhere as long as he can count on the firm support of Russia and Iran. Yes, he’s a war criminal. But to prevent the further commission of war crimes, sometimes it’s necessary to make a deal with the devil. His punishment will come eventually – just as it did for Slobodan Milosevic six years after the Dayton Accords. In the meantime, Washington has to pursue a diplomatic deal that stops punishing ordinary Syrians every day.

The ISIS, however, is not a force that is subject to negotiations. I don’t foresee a non-military solution to the specific problem of the would-be caliphate’s territorial ambitions. But the US should not head up this fight. ISIS wants nothing better than an epic confrontation with the US. Syrians and Iraqis must take the lead against ISIS, with Turkey, Iran and even the Gulf States playing crucial roles. In the best-case scenario, admittedly a long shot, the terrorist faction inadvertently reduces the conflict between the Shia and Sunni states that cooperate in its annihilation.

The CIA plan, the no-fly zone, the military focus on the ISIS – these are not long-term strategies. They are proposals that satisfy a bipartisan foreign policy elite that bays for “something to be done.” The true challenge for the next administration is to resist the call of the meatheads.

But that won’t happen without a counterforce that brings together a set of NGOs working for peace in the region, some sympathetic politicians and officials, and a group of foreign policy experts who have not fallen prey to the amnesia that periodically descends upon the Beltway concerning the destructive impact of US military intervention.

Trump is almost history. The far more complex challenge of Clinton’s Middle East policy awaits.

John Feffer is the director of Foreign Policy In Focus.

This article was originally published on the Foreign Policy In Focus. Read the original article.

Laos Gets Extra $90 million from US to Clear Unexploded Ordnance

“I believe the United States has a moral obligation to help Laos heal,” said US President Barack Obama during his visit to Laos.

US President Barack Obama walks to honour guard during a welcoming ceremony at the Presidential Palace in Vientiane, Laos September 6, 2016. Credit: Reuters/Jorge Silva

US President Barack Obama walks to honour guard during a welcoming ceremony at the Presidential Palace in Vientiane, Laos September 6, 2016. Credit: Reuters/Jorge Silva

Vientiane: The US announced on Tuesday it would provide an additional $90 million over the next three years to help Laos, heavily bombed during the Vietnam War, clear unexploded ordnance (UXO) that has killed or injured more than 20,000 people.

The figure announced during President Barack Obama’s first visit to Laos is close to the $100million the US has spent in the past 20 years on clearing its UXO in Laos.

From 1964 to 1973, US warplanes dropped more than 270 million cluster munitions on the communist country, one-third of which did not explode, the Lao National Regulatory Authority for UXO says.

Obama became the first US president to visit Laos when he arrived in the once-isolated country on Monday to attend two regional summits, half a century after America’s “secret war” left Laos with the unfortunate distinction of being the most heavily bombed country, per capita, in history.

The White House said in a statement US programmes in Laos had helped slash UXO casualties from 300 to less than 50 a year and the additional funding would be used for a “comprehensive UXO survey of Laos and for continued clearing operations”.

“The United States is helping Laos clear unexploded ordnance, which poses a threat to people and hampers economic development,” it said.

The package would help support UXO victims needing rehabilitation, including orthotics and prosthetics, it added.

Obama, in a speech on Tuesday in the capital, Vientiane, addressed the secret war.

“As a result of that conflict many people fled or were driven from their homes,” Obama said. “At the time America did not acknowledge its role.”

“I believe the United States has a moral obligation to help Laos heal.”

UXO remains a stubborn problem in the region and experts say it could take decades to clear landmines and bombs in Laos, Cambodia and Vietnam, which were beset by conflicts in the 1960s and 1970s, and in Cambodia’s case, in the 1980s and 1990s too.

In the central Lao province of Xieng Khouang, the area most heavily bombed by US aircraft during the war in neighbouring Vietnam, there is a trail of devastation.

About 80% of the people of landlocked Laos rely on agriculture, but some of it is simply too dangerous to farm.

Approximately a quarter of its villages are contaminated with unexploded ordnance, says the British-based Mines Advisory Group, which helps find and destroy the bombs.

On Wednesday, Obama is expected to visit an organisation in Vientiane that works with those disabled by unexploded ordnance, the Cooperative Orthotic and Prosthetic Enterprise Visitor Center.

(Reuters)

Latest Poll Puts Clinton Ahead of Trump By Six Points

Trump’s support has experienced wider shifts ranging from 33% to 39% while his campaign has endured controversies and distractions in recent weeks.

A combination photo shows US Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton (L) and Republican US presidential candidate Donald Trump (R) in Los Angeles, California on May 5, 2016 and in Eugene, Oregon, US on May 6, 2016 respectively.

A combination photo shows US Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton (L) and Republican US presidential candidate Donald Trump (R) in Los Angeles, California on May 5, 2016 and in Eugene, Oregon, US on May 6, 2016 respectively. Credit: Reuters/Lucy Nicholson (L) and Jim Urquhart

New York: Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton has a six-percentage-point lead over Republican rival Donald Trump, according to a Reuters/Ipsos tracking poll released on Tuesday.

Clinton’s support has ranged from 41% to 44% since late July, and was about 41% in the August 11-15 online poll.

Trump’s support has experienced wider shifts ranging from 33% to 39% while his campaign has endured controversies and distractions in recent weeks. He is favoured by about 35% of likely voters, according to the most recent poll.

Trump has caused divisions in the Republican Party with his strong anti-immigrant and anti-Muslim rhetoric, and faced criticism from both parties earlier this month for a days-long feud with the parents of a Muslim American army captain killed in Iraq. Last week, 70 Republicans, including former members of Congress and Republican National Committee staff, wrote a letter calling for the RNC to stop helping Trump, whose actions they said were ‘divisive and dangerous.’

The number of likely voters who picked neither Clinton nor Trump in the poll was nearly 24%.

At this point in 2012, President Barack Obama was ahead of Republican nominee Mitt Romney by nearly the same margin, favoured by 46% of likely voters to Romney’s 41%, with about 13% picking neither candidate.

Obama and Romney swapped the lead in the poll several times through the summer and early fall before the president took and held the lead in late October.

In a separate Reuters/Ipsos poll that gave respondents the option to choose from Clinton, Trump, Libertarian candidate Gary Johnson and Green Party candidate Jill Stein, Clinton also led Trump by six percentage points.

Of the alternative party candidates, Johnson came in third with eight percentage points. Stein had about two percentage points.

The August 11-15 polls surveyed a sample of 1132 and 1131 likely voters, respectively, and had a credibility interval of three percentage points.

(Reuters)

As Obama Seeks UNSC Resolution to Support CTBT, India Keeps Its Options Open

Barack Obama is seeking to boost his legacy, but his plan will see some resistance from the Republicans. India, meanwhile, has chosen not to frame a position until the draft resolution is on the table.

Barack Obama is seeking to boost his legacy, but his plan will see some resistance from the Republicans. India, meanwhile, has chosen not to frame a position until the draft resolution is on the table.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi with President Barack Obama. Obama is trying to push for a UNSC resolution to ratify the CTBT but India has made no comment on the resolution yet. Credit: Wikipedia Commons

Prime Minister Narendra Modi with President Barack Obama. Obama is trying to push for a UNSC resolution to ratify the CTBT but India has made no comment on the resolution yet. Credit: Wikipedia Commons

New Delhi: As US President Barack Obama counts down his days in office, efforts to burnish his legacy with a re-look at the nuclear test ban treaty could have implications for India.

Two suggestions emanating from the White House – the adoption of a no-first use position in the US’s nuclear posture and a UN Security Council resolution calling for the early entry into force of the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty (CTBT) – have stirred fierce emotions among Republicans. But while the first looks like a non-starter, the plan for a UNSC resolution in time for the 20th anniversary of the CTBT in September may have more legs. The treaty opened for signature on September 24, 1996.

US national security council spokesperson Ned Price told the Washington Post that the Obama administration is “looking at possible action in the UN Security Council that would call on states not to test and support the CTBT’s objectives”.

“This is an idea that has been discussed in diplomatic circles for several months and is just now, in recent days, being informally discussed among UN Security Council members,” Daryl Kimball, executive director of the Washington-based advocacy group Arms Control Association (ACA), told The Wire.

South Block sources indicated that New Delhi is aware of the proposal, but until a draft resolution is actually on the table, it will not start framing a position.

As per media reports, the draft resolution will “reinforce norm[s] against nuclear testing”, underscore the value of the 1996 CTBT and and also the international monitoring system to detect clandestine testing”. There will, however, be “no legally binding obligations”.

Seeking a lasting legacy

India never signed onto the CTBT, with Arundhati Ghose, who was its permanent representative to the UN in Geneva in 1996, famously stating the country’s decision by saying, “not now, not later”. Nevertheless, the UN General Assembly overwhelmingly voted to adopt the treaty and it was opened for signatures on September 24, 1996.

Twenty years and 164 signatories later, the treaty has yet to take effect formally. The key wrinkle has been Article 14, which India vehemently opposed during negotiations in 1995-96, stating that it couldn’t be coerced into signing an international pact and that the article was thus against international law. The language in question stipulates that the treaty will only enter into force after 44 nuclear-capable countries – listed in an annexe to the treaty – sign and ratify the pact.

Among the Annexe 2 countries, India, North Korea and Pakistan have all refrained from signing the CTBT. Five others – the US, China, Egypt, Iran, and Israel – have signed but not ratified the treaty.

In October 1999, the US Senate rejected the treaty, voting largely along partisan lines. At the time, Republicans expressed concerns over the integrity of maintaining stewardship of the proposed nuclear weapon stockpile without any explosive testing and verification of the weapons.

Ten years later, Obama, while in Prague in 2009, said his administration would “immediately and aggressively pursue US ratification of the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty”.

With the Republican-majority Senate in no mood to indulge Obama, however, the president’s White House team has now cast its eye on the UN to procure a farewell present for him and get closer to his aim of non-proliferation. 

Portrait of Dr Lassina Zerbo. Credit: Photo Simonis/CTBTO/flickr/ CC BY 2.0

Portrait of Dr Lassina Zerbo. Credit: Photo Simonis/CTBTO/flickr/ CC BY 2.0

In his first public reaction to the move by the US, the executive secretary of Vienna-based Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty Organization (CTBTO), Lassina Zerbo, welcomed the American decision by saying “any step” that reinforces the global norm against nuclear test explosions “is a step in the right direction”.

“A resolution by the Security Council would clearly send a strong signal, particularly during this year in which we are commemorating the CTBT’s 20th anniversary,” Zerbo said in a statement issued to The Wire.

A geo-physicist from Burkina Faso, Zerbo noted that the resolution will call upon all states to maintain the CTBTO’s global monitoring network, the “International Monitoring System”, which has shown that it can “deter and detect nuclear tests with great reliability”.

“The network is 90% complete, comprising 300 stations, some in the most remote and inaccessible areas of the Earth and sea. The system swiftly and precisely detected all four of the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea’s declared nuclear tests. The maintenance and completion of the monitoring system is of utmost importance in order not to lose the huge technical and financial investment made throughout the last 20 years,” he told The Wire.

However, he added that the resolution should “not divert our attention from the real unfinished business: the fact that we have a treaty which is operational, yet still not in force, after 20 years”.

“A Security Council resolution is a positive step, but what really counts is the ratification of the remaining eight countries to bring the CTBT into force”.

In Washington, the UNSC resolution plan got a predictably furious reception in Republican circles, with the chair for the Senate foreign relations committee, Bob Corker terming it “an affront to Congress… an affront to the American people”.

“Should we ever decide we may wish to test, we could be sued in international courts over violating a United Nations Security Council resolution that Congress played no role in,” he said.

In an angry editorial, the Wall Street Journal denounced the proposal for attempting to “usurp the Senate’s constitutional treaty powers with an end-run to the UN”.

“Mr. Obama has already entered brave new worlds of executive overreach by ignoring Congress on immigration and sending the Iran deal to the UN before submitting it (as a non-treaty) to the Senate. This would be a new low, undermining America’s nuclear deterrent while showing contempt for constitutional bounds,” the editorial said.

Zerbo, however, asserted that the UNSC resolution will only be exhortatory in nature, and would not supplant the US legislative system. “In order for the US to ratify the CTBT, the US Senate would have to provide its advice and consent to ratification. In my view, this resolution cannot supersede or circumvent that process,” he said.

Proposal draws scepticism

The polarised political atmosphere in the US, however, may not have much time for the claims of Congress’s supremacy over the ratification procedure to be debated.

“A Security Council resolution might help Obama’s image but would enhance polarisation with the Senate,” said Rakesh Sood, the special envoy on disarmament and non-proliferation of former Prime Minister Manmohan Singh. “Since it doesn’t change the entry into force provisions, the resolution will still require Senate ratification which will be now more unlikely. This will make it impossible for the CTBT to ever see the light of the day,” he added.

Drawing parallels with the Obama administration’s Iran deal – which bypassed Congress – is “misplaced”, said Sheel Kant Sharma, a former Indian ambassador to the UN in Geneva and a former SAARC secretary general. The UNSC became the arbiter as the International Atomic Energy Agency had transmitted to it a resolution noting the non-implementation of Iran’s treaty obligations under the NPT and its safeguards agreement, he said.

“In case of [the] CTBT, it’s [a] well worked out treaty with 164 countries as treaty parties. Though not in force, it has been there for 20 years. You cannot completely supplant the treaty process with a Security Council resolution. It will undermine the CTBT no end,” Sharma asserted.

He pointed out that among the countries who still have to ratify the CTBT, North Korea and Iran have “individually rejected UNSC dadagiri (bullying). So to expect the UNSC resolution to lead to the signing of CTBT is not realistic”.

Manpreet Sethi, senior fellow at Centre for Air Power Studies, said that the “last ditch effort by an embattled president who couldn’t live up to most of his nuclear promises in Prague” is not likely to meet much success. Not only will he face heavy opposition from Congress, “more importantly, [the] time is not ripe for engendering a consensus within the UNSC on this issue”, she said.

Among the P-5, only the US and China have not ratified the treaty. “To force Chinese ratification by going to the UNSC is very political… You might put China on the mat, but that’s a small gain for the treaty… After all, if China doesn’t veto, then they have a responsibility as a permanent member to ratify,” said Sharma.

David Santoro, senior fellow, nuclear policy at CSIS Pacific Forum, is also sceptical of the UNSC proposal, but only because it may eat into precious diplomatic capital that the US cannot afford to lose right now.

“Taken in the abstract”, the UNSC resolution would be a “good development”, he said, adding for good measure that “it will not in any way bypass the Senate”.

“We, however, do not live in the abstract. At this very moment, I believe that the Obama administration has more urgent priorities. Strengthening the norm against nuclear tests may be important, but it is less essential than, for instance, investing time and efforts to maintain and increase strategic stability with Russia (and China),” he told The Wire in an emailed response.

With Washington’s relationship with Russia having “deteriorated considerably”, keeping an eye on the East should be “the number one priority”, he claimed. “Some will say that doing both [pushing for the UN resolution and focusing on Russia] is possible and that these are not mutually exclusive goals. That may be true, but more often than not, focusing on one order of business means relegating another to the bench,” said Santoro.

Sharma pointed out that the electoral campaign may also put a road-block in the way of Obama’s UNSC resolution. “Hillary Clinton was going out of her way to tap conservative Republicans who are completely upset at Trump’s follies. Republicans will be put off if any high handed manner is used by the president,” he noted, adding that Clinton may herself ask Obama to put off such a resolution.

Kimball believes that with the US Senate being polarised over the issue for so many years, a UNSC resolution at this juncture, when Clinton looks set to win, could kick-start the ratification process in Senate. “I believe that it is possible that if Hillary Clinton wins the White House and the Democrats retake the Senate, we could see the kind of serious debate and consideration of the CTBT that would make it obvious that it is in the United States’ interests to finally ratify the treaty”.

Kimball said that even if the US were to ratify tomorrow, seven other states must also ratify the treaty, “a process that will take years”. “It is possible that over time the taboo against nuclear testing might erode and it is therefore responsible and prudent to reaffirm that the key states that have conducted nuclear tests in the past remain committed to the CTBT and to their unilateral moratoria pending its entry into force and to reaffirm the value of completing and maintaining support for the international test monitoring system,” he underlined.

The Indian stance

A UNSC resolution, with no legally binding obligation, certainly cannot force India to adhere to the CTBT, officials say.

In the afterglow of Prague in 2009, Obama chaired a special session of the UNSC at the level of heads of governments that adopted Resolution 1887, which called on non-signatories of the NPT to accede to the treaty. Seven years later, India, Pakistan and Israel have yet to fall in line.

But, if the resolution on the CTBT does come to pass, India may have to take a public stance – balancing its traditional position as it conducts a campaign to join the Nuclear Suppliers Group (NSG) after a failed attempt in June.

The Stimson Centre’s Michael Krepon has argued in favour of the UNSC resolution on the basis that it will allow for reaffirmation of national moratoria. “This resolution provides an opportunity for the permanent five members of the Security Council to reaffirm a global ban on testing. It also provides an opportunity for India, Pakistan, and Israel to reaffirm their national moratoria on testing,” he wrote.

Kimball, who in the past has not favoured India getting a key to the NSG, felt that it will be “useful” if India’s leadership “would not only reaffirm their commitment not to resume nuclear testing but to take part in the international monitoring system and to commit to considering ratification of the CTBT at a future time”.

“[The] Indian government [has] not provided a coherent explanation for why it considers the CTBT to be discriminatory or why it is opposed to a global, legally binding prohibition on nuclear test explosions. If India expressed active opposition to the CTBT at this time, it would not help its ambition to become a member of the NSG,” he added.

Echoing such views, Santoro also noted, “I believe that it would be in Indian interests to support the resolution if it wants to be a responsible international citizen”.

Zerbo also weighed in that India has been an “ardent supporter of non-testing”. “India took part in the negotiations of the CTBT, and has reaffirmed that it would not stand in the way of the entry into force of the treaty,” he said.

Former Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee at the UN General Assembly in 1998. Credit: Permanent Mission of India to the UN

Former Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee at the UN General Assembly in 1998. Credit: Permanent Mission of India to the UN

After the 1998 Pokhran-II nuclear tests, at a UN General Assembly session, former Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee indicated that India was prepared to bring discussions on the CTBT “to a successful conclusion, so that [the coming] into force of the CTBT is not delayed beyond September 1999”. That deadline wasn’t met, but Vajpayee reiterated on various occasions that “India will not stand in the way of entry into force of the CTBT”.

Even one-and-half years after the new government took over in 2004, Manmohan Singh’s administration was still stating Vajpayee’s position on the CTBT.

But, references to Vajpayee’s line have reduced since then. Only Japan continues to raise the issue of adhering to the CTBT at all its bilateral meetings with India; to which the standard Indian response is to reiterate its commitment to a “unilateral and voluntary moratorium on nuclear explosive testing”.

Zerbo also reasserted that “UN action on the CTBT in commemoration of its 20th anniversary would provide India (and all other states) with the opportunity to reaffirm its national moratorium on testing”.

During the 1996 talks on the CTBT in Vienna, Sood was the director in the foreign ministry’s disarmament and internal security division, coordinating with Ghose, who was representing India in Geneva at the time, to stop the rail-roading of India’s objections.

“We should use this opportunity to once again point out the flaw in the CTBT pertaining to its entry into force provisions. We should also point out that Obama has authorised [the] modernisation of [the] US [nuclear] arsenal at a cost of $1 trillion over three decades,” Sood said in reply to a query on how India should frame a position on the UNSC resolution.

With India highly unlikely to give any firm commitment to sign the CTBT and China keeping mum on ratification, Sharma said that during the NSG process India should highlight the fact that it has tested only twice in the last 42 years. “For most of the time, we have not tested. In the same period, others have conducted thousands of tests”.