U.S. presidential candidate worked in Lebanon during civil war

(NEW YORK) — U.S. presidential candidate and former U.S. Senator Jim Webb won an Emmy award in 1983 for a special report he produced in Lebanon during the country’s civil war.

The former Democratic senator from Virginia is virtually invisible from media coverage of the 2016 presidential race, pulling in only 2 percent of support among Democrats, according to a CBS poll.

But his history offers an interesting perspective on the U.S. role in international conflicts. The 1983 report, which aired on “The MacNeil/Lehrer NewsHour” was introduced as a “personal commentary.”

Webb, who graduated from the Georgetown University Law Center, previously served as Secretary of the Navy, Assistant Secretary of Defense for Reserve Affairs, and as a Marine Corps officer.

PBS sent Webb, a former journalist, to Beirut to examine the disconnect that can exist between decision makers in Washington, and military officials who implement policies on the ground.

“The military does not make policy. That responsibility belongs to members of Congress and, of course, the President,” he said in the video essay. “The military simply implements their policy, often at great cost. A politician might suffer bad press or a lost election if things go wrong. The military man suffers the loss of his friends, early and often.”

His extensive reporting brought him back on PBS to comment on the 1983 Beirut barracks bombing, which killed 241 American military servicemen that year.

Today, Webb offers an interesting prospect on conflicts in the Middle East, warning against adding boots on the ground in Syria.

“We need to be very careful,” Webb told The Washington Post in a September 2014 interview. He compared the situation in Syria to the civil war that raged Lebanon and drew U.S. involvement, calling Syria “Lebanon on steroids.”

WATCH Webb’s 1983 report from Beirut:

Lebanon elects new ‘Miss’ but still no president

(BEIRUT) — Oh, the irony!

A new Miss Lebanon for 2015 was elected on Monday, proving that some elections do actually exist in Lebanon!

While the presidential palace in Baabda remains empty, a panel of judges somehow managed to appoint a new Miss Lebanon to represent the country in the upcoming Miss World and Miss Universe competitions.

Clearly, representation at these pageants is far more important than representation at international security meetings and among world leaders.

The beauty is Valerie Abou Chacra, a 23-year-old student at the Lebanese American University, who received the crown from Sally Greige, Miss Lebanon 2014.

Abou Chacra beat out 13 other women with the judges’ votes, including Josline Mosleh and Cynthia Samoeil, who were first runners-up. Nour Nasrallah and Maria Tannous came in second and third place, respectively.

Greige presented Abou Chacra with the Miss Lebanon crown during a live pageant broadcast on LBC. Unlike Lebanon’s own leaders, Greige cannot extend her own term.

Political quarrels have created a stalemate in Lebanon, which has left the country without a president for over a year. President Michel Sleiman’s term expired in May 2014.

So here’s an idea — elect Valerie as president! You don’t have enough women in politics, anyway.

Once again, Lebanon proves to be the land of irony.

Abou Chacra earned a majority of points from the judges. Josline Mosleh and Cynthia Samoeil were first runners-up, and Nour Nasrallah and Maria Tannous came in second and third place, respectively. (Photo via LBCI)
Abou Chacra earned a majority of points from the judges. Josline Mosleh and Cynthia Samoeil were first runners-up, and Nour Nasrallah and Maria Tannous came in second and third place, respectively. (Photo via LBCI)

Thousands of Lebanese rally for Christian politician Aoun

(BEIRUT) — Thousands of Lebanese rallied at the presidential palace outside Beirut on Sunday in a show of support for Christian politician Michel Aoun, pressing their demand for him to fill the presidency vacant for over a year.

Waving the orange flag of Aoun’s Free Patriotic Movement (FPM), they packed streets in the Baabda district that houses the headquarters of the presidency.

The presidency is set aside for a Maronite Christian but has been unoccupied due to a political crisis stoked by regional conflicts including the war in neighboring Syria.

“The president of the republic shouldn’t be just any person who fills the post, as some people want him to be,” Aoun told the crowd as his supporters shouted, “Aoun for president of the republic!”

“It should be someone who is like you, who reflects you and who rejects oppression and stands up for your rights,” he said.

The rally was called to mark events in October 1990, near the end of the Lebanese civil war, when the Syrian army captured Baabda and many Lebanese soldiers loyal to Aoun were killed.

Aoun – head of one of two rival administrations at the time – was forced out of the presidential palace and later into exile.

Aoun, an ally of the powerful Lebanese Shi’ite Muslim movement Hezbollah, has made clear he would like the presidency, but he lacks the backing of a rival alliance led by Sunni Muslim politician Saad al-Hariri.

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That bloc includes prominent Christian rivals to Aoun, notably his civil war enemy Samir Geagea, who also seeks the presidency.

Aoun, who has argued that Christians are being politically marginalized in Lebanon, has said the president should be elected in a popular vote if parliament cannot agree.

Resolving the deadlock over the presidency has been complicated by regional rivalry between Saudi Arabia, which backs Hariri, and Iran, which supports Hezbollah.

Aoun has taken aim at the national unity government led by Prime Minister Tammam Salam, saying it has usurped the powers of the presidency. FPM ministers have not, however, quit the government.

Salam’s government, formed with Saudi-Iranian blessing, has spared Lebanon a complete vacuum in the executive arm but has been unable to take any major decisions due to a lack of consensus.

Lebanon’s political paralysis has fueled a broader wave of discontent that has touched off sometimes violent protests over failing public services in recent months. Anger came to a head this summer over a crisis over trash disposal that left piles of refuse mounting on Beirut’s streets.

REUTERS

Former Lebanese MP Elias Skaff dies at 66

(BEIRUT) — Former Lebanese MP Elias Joseph Skaff died in a Beirut hospital on Saturday after a long battle with an illness. He was 66.

The former Zahle minister was first elected in 1992 as head of the Popular Bloc following the death of his father Joseph Skaff. He was later re-elected in 1996, 2000 and 2005.

Skaff was appointed minister of industry in 2003 in the government of Rafik Hariri, and served as the minister of agriculture in 2004 and 2005 in the Omar Karami government.

He also participated in the sessions of National Dialogue as head of the parliamentary Popular Bloc in 2006. In July 2008, Skaff was appointed agriculture minister to the cabinet of then prime minister Fouad Siniora.

He lost his seat in the 2009 parliamentary elections.

Skaff was born in Cyprus on October 11, 1948 and spent his childhood in New Zealand where he received his elementary education. He later graduated in 1975 with a bachelor’s degree in Agricultural Engineering from the American University of Beirut.

According to reports, Skaff was first transported in September to the American University of Beirut Medical Center.

Skaff leaves behind his wife Myriam Gebran Tawk and two children, Joseph and Gebran.

U.S. delivers $9M arms package to Lebanese Army

(BEIRUT) — The United States delivered Friday an $8.6 million arms package of Hellfire missiles and artillery munitions to the Lebanese army, according to the U.S. embassy in Beirut.

The package, which includes 50 Hellfire air-to-surface missiles and 560 artillery rounds including the “precision munitions”, will help the army “secure Lebanon’s borders against violent extremists,” the embassy said in a statement.

“Ambassador David Hale visited Beirut Airbase (Friday) morning to inspect America’s latest delivery of ‘Hellfire’ missiles and artillery munitions to the Lebanese Armed Forces (LAF),” the statement added.

Embassy officials said the weapons are meant to help Lebanon defend spillovers from neighboring Syria, which have left the Lebanese army on high alert in eastern Lebanon.

Border violence has sparked clashes and cross-border attacks between opposing groups in the Syrian conflict. The Lebanese army fought several days last year with insurgent groups, including the Islamic State and Nusra Front, when they attempted to attack the northeastern Lebanese town of Arsal.

The embassy noted that “munitions delivery demonstrates America’s sustained commitment to ensure that the Lebanese Armed Forces has the support it needs to be the sole defender of Lebanese territory and its borders, and is answerable to the state and to the Lebanese people through the state.”

According to the embassy, the U.S. has provided over $1.3 billion dollars in security assistance to the Lebanese Armed Forces since 2004.

U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry recently announced the U.S. would double its military aid to the Lebanese Army this year.

“These funds will allow the Lebanese Armed Forces to buy munitions, improve close air support, sustain vehicles and aircraft, modernize airlift capacity, provide training to its soldiers, and add to the mobility of armored units,” he said.

Kerry made the announcement during the third ministerial meeting of the International Support Group for Lebanon in New York on Sept. 30.

U.S. charges two Lebanese with laundering money for Hezbollah

(NEW YORK) — U.S. prosecutors on Friday charged two Lebanese nationals with plotting to launder drug money and broker other illegal deals to Lebanon to support Hezbollah.

Prosecutors allege that Lebanese businesswoman Iman Kobeissi, 50, and Lebanese attorney Joseph Asmar, 42, are connected to a global network of money launderers for Hezbollah.

Kobeissi allegedly tried to purchase thousands of weapons, including more than 1,000 assault rifles and machine guns, for Lebanese fighters. Authorities claim she told an undercover Drug Enforcement Administration agent that she planned to buy weapons for Hezbollah associates in Iran.

Kobeissi was arrested Thursday in Atlanta and transferred to New York.

Authorities said Joseph Asmar conspired to launder about $8 million from South and Central American drug traffickers. Asmar was arrested on a provisional warrant in Paris, according to authorities.

The criminal complaint was unsealed Friday in a New York federal court, detailing two years of recorded meetings between undercover U.S. agents and Kobeissi and Asmar.

In October 2014, drug enforcement agents said Kobeissi told them she had friends in Hezbollah who wanted to purchase cocaine, weapons, and ammunition. According to the report, Kobeissi and Asmar said their friends in Africa could provide security for planeloads of cocaine heading to the U.S. and other countries.

During the investigation, undercover agents gave approximately $400,000 in fake drug proceeds to Kobeissi and Asmar, who laundered the money back to the U.S. in exchange for a commission, prosecutors said.

In total, the defendants allegedly plotted to launder $8 million in illicit funds on behalf of drug-trafficking organizations in Latin America.

Kobeissi pleaded not guilty in court Friday. Asmar was arrested in Paris, but his lawyer could not be located for comment.

The U.S. State Department designates Hezbollah as a foreign terrorist organization, although a January 2014 report removed the group from its “Terrorism” section, citing attempts to “dampen sectarianism.”

PHOTOS: Police fire tear gas, water cannons at Lebanese protesters

(BEIRUT) — Lebanese security forces fired tear gas and water cannons at Lebanese anti-government protesters in Beirut on Thursday, injuring three dozen people and six riot policemen, according to the Lebanese Red Cross.

Protesters are angry with widely perceived corruption and the government’s failure to provide public services, such as trash pickup on Beirut’s streets.

The activist group ‘You Stink’ started the movement months ago in response to the widely reported trash crisis, which began when residents south of Beirut barricaded a landfill to complain of toxic fumes.

A protester throws a flower over barbed wire as riot policemen block a street leading to the parliament building during a protest in downtown Beirut, Lebanon on Oct. 8, 2015. (Jamal Saidi/Reuters)
A protester throws a flower over barbed wire as riot policemen block a street leading to the parliament building during a protest in downtown Beirut, Lebanon on Oct. 8, 2015. (Jamal Saidi/Reuters)
Lebanese protesters are sprayed with water. (Mohamed Azakir/Reuters)
Lebanese protesters are sprayed with water. (Mohamed Azakir/Reuters)
Lebanese anti-government protesters throw a road sign against the riot policemen. (Hussein Malla/AP)
Lebanese anti-government protesters throw a road sign against the riot policemen. (Hussein Malla/AP)
A firework is launched by Lebanese anti-government protesters. (Hassan Ammar/AP)
A firework is launched by Lebanese anti-government protesters. (Hassan Ammar/AP)
Damage left at the site the clashes fill the street leading to the parliament building on Oct. 9. (Wael Hamzeh/EPA)
Damage left at the site the clashes fill the street leading to the parliament building on Oct. 9. (Wael Hamzeh/EPA)
A man carries a protester affected by tear gas. (Aziz Taher/Reuters)
A man carries a protester affected by tear gas. (Aziz Taher/Reuters)
Lebanese security forces fire tear gas at protesters. (Anwar Amro/AFP/Getty Images)
Lebanese security forces fire tear gas at protesters. (Anwar Amro/AFP/Getty Images)
Protesters warm themselves and dry their clothes over a fire after being sprayed by water cannons in Martyr square, downtown Beirut. (Stringer/Reuters)
Protesters warm themselves and dry their clothes over a fire after being sprayed by water cannons in Martyr square, downtown Beirut. (Stringer/Reuters)
Lebanese security forces detain a protester. (Anwar Amro/AFP/Getty Images)
Lebanese security forces detain a protester. (Anwar Amro/AFP/Getty Images)
Protesters hold on to a barricade while being sprayed with water from water cannons. (Mohamed Azakir/Reuters)
Protesters hold on to a barricade while being sprayed with water from water cannons. (Mohamed Azakir/Reuters)
A protestor throws back a tear gas canister. (Mohamed Azakir/Reuters)
A protestor throws back a tear gas canister. (Mohamed Azakir/Reuters)
Protesters gesture with the victory sign as security forces fire water cannons. (Aziz Taher/Reuters)
Protesters gesture with the victory sign as security forces fire water cannons. (Aziz Taher/Reuters)
Lebanese activists carrying a Lebanese flag as water is sprayed on them. (Nabil Mounzer/EPA)
Lebanese activists carrying a Lebanese flag as water is sprayed on them. (Nabil Mounzer/EPA)
A protester holds an umbrella as he is sprayed by water cannons. (Hassan Ammar/AP)
A protester holds an umbrella as he is sprayed by water cannons. (Hassan Ammar/AP)

Israeli forces strike stun grenade at Lebanon-based TV reporter

(BEIRUT) — Israeli police forces fired a stun grenade on Sunday at news reporter Hana Mahameed, striking her directly in the face and causing facial trauma, according to media reports.

Mahameed, who works for the Lebanon-based Al-Mayadeen television network, was covering clashes between Arab residents and Israeli law enforcement from the Arab neighborhood of al-Issawiya when the attack happened.

Clashes occurred in response to the death of Palestinian teenager Fadi Alloun, who was shot dead by police after he stabbed an Israeli boy on Sunday.

Mahmeed was seen wearing a blue jacket with a signed marked “PRESS” attached to it. According to Ma’an News Agency, “In a video of the incident, the reporter suddenly stops talking during a live report and begins screaming after being hit in the face with a canister.”

Media reports said Mahameed was rushed to a local hospital where she was treated for injuries.

Israeli police spokeswoman Luba Samri told The Daily Mail, the police responded with ‘riot dispersal means’ and that ‘whoever is present with law-breaking rioters risks getting injured’.

But Mahameed claims Israeli forces aimed directly at her TV crew as they reported live on the neighborhood clashes.

Mahameed courageously returned to work the next day with bandages covering the parts of her face burned by a stun grenade.

WATCH the live report:

Roadside bomb in Lebanon targets van heading to Syria

(BEIRUT) — A roadside bomb went off in Lebanon on Monday targeting a passenger van transporting travelers to Syria, reported LBCI television.

Security forces said the explosive was placed in an alley near a Lebanese customs building in the Bekaa town of Chtaura.

Chtaura is located between the Mount Lebanon and the Anti-Lebanon mountain range. It is located halfway on the Beirut to Damascus highway, almost 44 km from Beirut.

Media reports said no causalities or major damage was reported following the blast.

LBCI television said the bomb targeted a Hezbollah passenger van, which continued on its journey, according to Al Arabiya.

The Lebanese Army later announced the bomb was rigged with four kilograms of explosives. The area has since been cordoned off for army officials to investigate.

According to An-Nahar, Hezbollah has become a target of attacks by armed groups that support the rebels, especially since Hezbollah started fighting alongside the Syrian regime.

A number of bombings have struck Hezbollah strongholds in Beirut’s southern suburbs and in the Bekaa region in recent years.

Lebanese politicians scuffle; turn electricity meeting into circus

(BEIRUT) — Rival Lebanese lawmakers turned an electricity committee meeting into a circus Monday as Mustaqbal Movement and Change and Reform MPs engaged in a shouting match accusing each other of corruption.

Ziad Aswad, from MP Michel Aoun’s Change and Reform Bloc, and Jamal Jarrah, from former Prime Minister Saad Hariri’s Future Bloc, nearly brawled on live television before being held back by their colleagues.

The scuffle began when Change and Reform MP Hikmat Deeb protested MP Mohammed Qabbani’s labeling of the Energy Ministry as “Ali Baba’s cave and the 40 advisors,” reported Voice of Lebanon radio (100.5).

This led to a verbal dispute between the lawmakers, triggering expletives and a loud shouting match for several minutes, before journalists and camera crews were asked to leave the room.

The meeting was later suspended and both parties went on the offensive, calling for news conferences to defend their actions.

“The scuffle was a result of historic accumulation of disputes at the committee,” Change and Reform MP Fadi al-Awar told LBCI after the meeting. “Officials and other figures, including Qabbani, who do not pay their electricity bills should be held accountable.”

Qabbani fired back, calling for future committee meetings to be open to the media and defending his party’s response.

“It is shameful to see such barbarism in communication at parliament,” Qabbani said. “I challenge any of those MPs to present any electricity bill that I have not paid.”

Qabbani explained the session was suspended because of the “shameful turn as shown on camera.”

WATCH the scuffle unfold:

 

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