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Volume 14, Issue 15
 
"The Iranian government has liked to brainwash us since we were kids. When I was a teenager it was like that about Israel, too. I was taught to shout 'Death to Israel, Death to America' and today, people are shouting 'Death to the Regime.'  Now the Iranian people are refusing to trample Israeli and American flags. The citizens of Iran are so brave. Our enemies aren't America and Israel, but the Regime."

—Masih Alinejad

By Hussein Aboubakr | July 23, 2021 | Published in Mosaic

“In 2021,” wrote Marc Lynch, the American political scientist who gave the Arab Spring its name, “there may be few beliefs more universally shared than that the Arab uprisings failed.” His statement sums up the conventional wisdom of observers in the West. And as someone who was not only present in Egypt during the uprising, but was among the throngs of young people in Cairo’s Tahrir square demanding change, I can hardly say that I look back on those days with anything but disappointment. Nor do the stories of other Arab lands caught up in the wave of revolutions invite more optimism. But simply to see the Arab Spring as having given way to an “Arab Winter” is to miss something crucial about what has happened to the Middle East over the past ten years.

The conventional story of the Arab Spring’s failure goes something like this: in 2010 and 2011, people across the Middle East took to the streets en masse, standing up to their despotic and corrupt rulers after decades of submission. Suddenly, there was hope for democracy, or at least some less authoritarian form of government. In most places, however, the protest movements either were smothered in their cradles or led to bloody civil wars. But most tragic of all is the case of Egypt, which held the first true democratic election in its history, only to see the winner removed by a military coup, and then replaced by an even more brutal version of the status quo ante. Hope for Arab democracy has been quashed, and the prospects for political reform in the Middle East are worse than ever.

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Lebanon is teetering on the brink of collapse. On August 4th, it will be exactly one year since the deadly explosion in the Port of Beirut, which killed more than 200 people, wounded approximately 6,500 and caused the economy to plummet. The economic situation remains dire, with shortages in every field of life from food, medicine, baby formula, gasoline and electricity. The Central Bank of Lebanon has totally run out of reserves and there are severe restrictions for the Lebanese people on the amount that they can withdraw from their personal accounts.

Unfortunately, Hezbollah has become the main benefactor with the financial backing it receives from Iran. Hezbollah has almost totally dominated the country’s military, political and commercial sectors. For the last several months ,Hezbollah has been issuing “ration cards” for food, medicine and fuel, making the citizens dependent on the Shiite terrorist group.

With Hezbollah’s unparalleled political influence on the political system, Prime Minister-designate Said Harari has been unable to form a government.

Israeli Defense Minister Benny Gantz proposed on July 6, 2021 to extend humanitarian assistance to Lebanon. “As an Israeli, as a Jew and as a human being, my heart aches seeing the images of people going hungry on the streets of Lebanon,” Gantz said. No answer has come yet from Israel’s northern neighbor.

What could and should be done about Lebanon today? Is it in America’s, Israel’s or the international community’s interest to extend a helping hand to Lebanon, or is Hezbollah’s influence too great now? Have we passed the point of no return?

Here to discuss this is Dr. Walid Phares.
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About the speaker:

Walid Phares is a Middle East expert and pacesetter, often predicting trends and situations on the ground years before they occur. He is a Fox News Expert, advisor to the US Congress and the European Parliament and served as a senior advisor on national security foreign policy to presidential candidate Mitt Romney 2012.

Dr. Phares taught political science and Middle East studies at Florida Atlantic University between 1993 and 2004. Since 2006, he has taught Global Jihadi strategies at the National Defense University in Washington, D.C. Dr. Phares lectures to academic associations and on campuses nationwide and internationally, including at the US Intelligence University, Georgetown, Columbia, University of Chicago and Ecole Militaire of France in Paris. 

After having authored six books on Middle East politics and history in Arabic in the 1980s, Dr. Phares authored another five in English since the mid-1990s. His most important volumes were published after 9/11 starting with Future Jihad: Terrorist Strategies against America, read and cited by many members of Congress and the European Parliament. Dr. Phares predicted the rise of jihadi urban networks and set forth strategies to counter them in the West and overseas. Media and colleagues alike rave about Phares's hallmark book, The Coming Revolution: Struggle for Freedom in the Middle East, which predicted the Arab Spring a year in advance

Dr. Phares is a native of Beirut, Lebanon, and immigrated to the United States in 1990. He speaks fluent Arabic, French and English. Prior to moving stateside, Dr. Phares was a student union leader and lawyer and founded a social-democratic party, which he represented in several political coalitions. Dr. Phares holds a Ph.D. in international relations and strategic studies from the University of Miami, a Political Science Degree from St. Joseph University, a Law degree from the Lebanese University in Beirut and a Master in International Law from Universite Jean Moulin in Lyons, France.

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Statement
By Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis on Ben & Jerry's
Israel
Exclusive: IDF sees sharp increase in Muslim draft - Jerusalem Post
Israel to join African Union as observer after being kept out for 2 decades  - Times of Israel
Iranian dissidents to visit Israel next week - Jerusalem Post
Temple Mount: PM continues Jewish visits after Muslim-police clashes - Jerusalem Post

Two rockets fired from Lebanon into Israel, IDF responds with artillery fire - JNS

Israeli airstrikes reported south of Aleppo - Syrian media - Jerusalem Post
Palestinian Affairs

Biden gives UNRWA $135m. after agency condemns anti-Israel hatred  - Jerusalem Post

Hamas’ Summer Indoctrination Camps for 50,000 Children - JCPA

Biden’s Mideast point man said to urge Israel to aid a teetering PA - Times of Israel
Iran
Violence intensifies in water-crisis protests in Iran’s Khuzestan  - Aljazeera
No international response to protests in Iran, activists call for support  - Jerusalem Post
U.S.-Iranian delegation making bridge-building visit to Israel  - Jerusalem Post
Middle East

The Media in the 2021 Gaza War: The New York Times’ Journalistic Malpractice - JCPA

Syria has become a narco-state - Jerusalem Post
Jordan Harbors Our Daughter’s Killer - Wall Street Journal
United States

The ‘apartheid’ poll and the disinformation discourse - JNS

US states’ fully baked anti-BDS laws could put the freeze on Ben & Jerry’s  - Times of Israel

Iranian Terror Comes to America  - Wall Street Journal

Tom Barrack charged with illegally lobbying then-President Trump on behalf of UAE - CNBC

Pompeo accuses Biden admin of working to make Iran America's 'senior partner' in Middle East - FOX News
Antisemitism


Rashida Tlaib’s Tisha B’Av Edition of Lying & Spreading Hate on Twitter - Jewish Press

Zuckerberg faces antisemitism after photo of his dog wearing a yarmulke - Jerusalem Post

Franklin and Marshall Alumni Letter Backs Faculty Condemnation of Israel’s ‘Jewish Supremacy’ - The Algemeiner

Opening ceremony director fired on Tokyo Games eve over Holocaust joke - Reuters

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