Khazen

White House faces oil standoff with Saudi Arabia and UAE as prices soar

by theguardian.com — Martin Chulov and Julian Borger — Joe Biden’s hardline stance on Russia has won him widespread plaudits, but with the most serious oil shock in decades now a reality, the US president’s attempt to cushion the blowback continues to meet resistance from the two allies he needs most. Saudi Arabia’s de facto leader, Mohammed bin Salman, and his counterpart in the United Arab Emirates, Mohammed bin Zayed, are yet to agree to a phone call with the west’s most powerful man – a scenario all but unthinkable during previous administrations. Biden’s immediate priority is for both countries to help exert maximum economic pressure on Russia by cranking up their oil output. Each capital is a major supplier of oil, with excess capacity, which would soften the effect on US consumers through fuel prices before midterm elections in November that threaten Democratic control of Congress.

With relations between the Middle East oil powers and Washington at their lowest in modern times, though, a reckoning is due that may realign the regional order on terms that favour Riyadh and Abu Dhabi. Both leaders have made it clear that they will settle for nothing less, and are ready to extract their price. As if to show the Biden administration what it could do, the UAE ambassador to Washington, Yousef al-Otaiba, last Wednesday said it favoured production increases “and will be encouraging Opec to consider higher production levels”, leading oil prices to fall by 13% the next day. But no action to increase supply followed and by the week’s end the price per barrel was back up to almost $130 (£100), an uncomfortably high level for Biden to take to the midterms. However, the standoff involves far more than oil. In Riyadh, Prince Mohammed feels snubbed by Biden’s refusal to engage with him ever since he took office. The murder of the Saudi dissident Jamal Khashoggi by the crown prince’s security aides, the war on Yemen, the jailing of rights activists and the boycott of Qatar have made him a pariah to the administration.

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Lebanon political factions gear up for May elections

by arabnews.com — Najia Houssari — BEIRUT: More than 500 candidates, including 69 women, have applied to contest Lebanese parliamentary elections on May 15, with the country’s Ministry of Interior expecting the number to rise dramatically before the midnight deadline on Tuesday. A total of 517 candidates had submitted applications by late Friday. The 2018 elections were contested by 976 candidates, including 113 women, but the number fell after the closure of registrations. As a result, 597 candidates, including 86 women, continued in 77 lists across Lebanese constituencies. The outlook of this year’s election will become clearer after the completion of electoral lists on April 4. Voters will head to the polls on May 15, with candidates competing for the country’s 128 parliamentary seats across 15 electoral districts. A number of the main parties will officially announce their candidates on Monday.

Speaker Nabih Berri will reveal his candidates, including current MPs and defendants in the Beirut Port explosion hearings, at a press conference. The Free Patriotic Movement announced its candidates during its seventh annual conference on Sunday. In an address, the party’s leader, Gebran Bassil, attacked his political opponents, including the March 14 Alliance and the civil movement, which he called “a false revolution,” adding that “they will fall.” Bassil defended Hezbollah and said that its partnership with the FPM in the electoral lists, to be formed later, “is not a program partnership, but a process of integrating votes.” Hezbollah seeks to ensure that the FPM reaches parliamentary seats with the least possible losses. Hezbollah officials have said: “Whoever fails the Amal Movement and Hezbollah is a partner in the largest regional and international attack that wants to destroy Hezbollah, which protects Lebanon.”

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Cash or card? Confusion rages over Lebanon’s new payment system

by arabnews.com — Najia Houssari — BEIRUT: Supermarket owners in Lebanon have blamed “hard-line measures” from the Banque du Liban for the introduction of a new payment system for their customers. The central bank’s change requires the payment of 50 percent of the value of purchases in cash, and 50 percent through bank cards, on account of “low liquidity” in markets, according to Nabil Fahed, head of the Syndicate of Supermarket Owners. This development came the same day as gas station owners decided to stop accepting full payments for fuel via bank card. Dr. Jassem Ajaka, an economist, described the repercussions as “economically catastrophic, as long as the amount of banknotes in Lebanese pounds that a citizen can withdraw from banks is limited while prices are rising.” This situation, he claimed, would make people consume less, causing a decline in GDP and a larger contraction in the economy.

Charles Arbid, president of the Economic and Social Council, said that Lebanon “is experiencing inflationary depression: That is, consumption and economic movement are stalled.” Operational prices are also rising for sectors such as energy and transportation, developments which, he said, require the immediate launch of a three-dimensional participatory dialogue at government level with employers and workers to devise solutions and take action. He added: “No solutions are magical and readily available.” The Association of Banks in Lebanon, meanwhile, will pay the government-approved social assistance to public sector employees, including the military. This assistance is equivalent to half of an additional salary per month, with a minimum of 1.5 million Lebanese pounds ($993) and a maximum of 3 million pounds. Sixty percent of this is paid in cash, and other means of payment are being adopted to transfer the remaining 40 percent by bank card or check.

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Lebanon is running out of time to avert starvation

By MICHAEL TANCHUM — thenationalnews.com — As Russia’s two-week-old war against Ukraine has brought Lebanon’s wheat imports from the besieged Black Sea nation to a complete standstill, the government in Beirut is racing against the clock to avert a catastrophic food crisis. The conflict has set off a food security problem for many nations across the Middle East and North Africa – a region that relies on the Black Sea wheat-growing region as their bread basket – but Lebanon’s situation is uniquely precarious. Its severe lack of storage capacity combined with its economic state of hyperinflation is to blame. The situation is dire, and in the absence of immediate financial assistance, a food system collapse could happen in a matter of weeks or even days.

Lebanon needs to import about 50,000 metric tonnes of wheat each month to cover the nation’s demand for bread, and the government had relied on Ukraine to provide about two thirds of that wheat supply, amounting to more than 400,000 metric tonnes per year. Lebanon used to be able to store four months’ worth of wheat reserves, but the August 2020 Beirut Port explosion destroyed the country’s primary grain storage silos, removing 120,000 tonnes of storage capacity that has yet to be restored to this day. Lebanon’s other major port in Tripoli has no grain storage capacity, leaving the country to fend with only a one month’s storage by using warehouses owned by 12 mills.

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Lebanese prosecutor bans five bank board chiefs from travel

by reuters — BEIRUT: A Lebanese prosecutor on Thursday issued travel bans against the heads of the boards of five Lebanese banks as a precautionary measure as she investigates transactions by their banks, the prosecutor told Reuters. Judge Ghada Aoun issued the bans against Salim Sfeir of Bank of Beirut, Samir Hanna of Bank Audi, […]

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لقاء الجمهورية: طرح الميغاسنتر في هذا التوقيت ملتبس ونخشى ان ينسف مواعيد الاستحقاقات الدستورية

وطنية – عقد “لقاء الجمهورية” اجتماعه عبر تطبيق” زوم” برئاسة الرئيس ميشال سليمان واكد في بيان “ضرورة إجراء الانتخابات في مواعيدها، لانه عدا عن كونها حقا طبيعيا للمواطن وأحد الأعمدة الأساسية للنظام الديموقراطي، فإنها تشكل سدا بوجه تسلط الحكام والامعان في المحاصصة، لذا فلا يجوز وتحت أي غطاء أو عذر تأجيل مواعيد استحقاقها”، مشيرا الى ان” طرح تنفيذ الميغاسنتر على أهميته وضرورته في هذا التوقيت طرح ملتبس”، معربا عن خشيته من “ان ينسف مواعيد الاستحقاقات الدستورية”.

ورأى “في الحرب على اوكرانيا خروجا عن المألوف والمنتظر من الدول الكبرى”، واعتبر ان “حرية الدول تجسيد لحرية الفرد ويرفض اللجوء إلى القوة لتغيير نظام ما، أو فرض شروط معينة، وتشكل انتهاكا لحقوق الانسان ومواثيق الأمم المتحدة الملزمة للبنان وفق الفقرة “ب” من مقدمة الدستور وهذا الموقف لا يخرج اطلاقا عن سياسة الحياد”، مؤكدا  ان “الحوار هو الطريق الامثل لحل

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Minister Sejaan Azzi: لبنانُ مُلتقى العواصف

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

يَشعرُ اللبنانيّون أنَّ لبنانَ هو المحافظةُ الاحتياط في كلِّ دولةٍ من دولِ العالم. ما إِن تَندلعُ حربٌ، ولو في المرّيخ، حتى يهرَعَ اللبنانيّون ـــ قبل أهلِ البلدِ حيث تدورُ الحربُ ـــ إلى التساؤلِ عن انعكاساتِها عليهم. مُخزٍ أن يَربُطَ اللبنانيّون دائمًا مصيرَ بلدِهم بكلِّ أزْمةٍ أو حربٍ خارجيّة. هذه مُصيبةُ كلِّ دولةٍ يتولّى أحكامَها تَبعِـيّون ومحترفو هِوايات. وهذه بَليّةُ كلِّ وطنٍ يَتحوّلُ عددٌ من مكوّناتِه مستعمراتٍ لدولٍ أُخرى. وهذه مأساةُ كلِّ شعبٍ منقسِمٍ على ذاتِه وعاجزٍ، بالتالي، عن حمايةِ سيادتِه واستقلالِه. وحزبُ الله الذي يوهِـمُنا بأنَّ سلاحَه يَحمي لبنان، هو سببُ بقاءِ لبنان في عينِ العواصف، وهو عِلّةُ زيادةِ ارتباطِ مصيرِ لبنان بأحداثِ الشرقِ الأوسطِ والعالم. لا نُنكِرُ أنَّ القوّةَ هي ركيزةُ أيِّ استراتيجيّةٍ دفاعيّة، إِنما شرطَ أن تكونَ قوّةً شرعيّةً لأنَّ القوّةَ غيرَ الشرعيّةِ هي مصدرُ ضعفٍ ونذيرُ عدوان وتَفتقِدُ الشرعيّةَ الدوليّة.

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Blinken downplays reports of Saudi, UAE distrust of Biden admin

By Caitlin McFall | Fox News — Secretary of State Antony Blinken on Wednesday downplayed the suggestion that the Biden administration was snubbed by oil-leading nations in the Middle East as the U.S. looks to counter surging oil prices amid Russia’s war in Ukraine. “We’re all talking regularly,” the secretary said. “I spent a fair bit of time on the phone with my Emirati counterpart,” he continued. “I regularly met with my Saudi counterpart, including in Munich, just a few weeks ago. President Biden spoke with King Salman of Saudi Arabia last month in a discussion that set out a very expansive agenda.”

The question was posed following a report Wednesday morning by The Wall Street Journal that claimed leaders in Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates (UAE) declined calls with Biden in recent weeks. The report also said Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman and the UAE’s Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed al Nahyanspoke with Russian President Vladimir Putin, despite declining to talk with Biden. “There was some expectation of a phone call, but it didn’t happen,” a U.S. official reportedly said of the planned discussion between the Saudi Prince Mohammed and Biden. “It was part of turning on the spigot [of Saudi oil].”

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Will the debate over ‘mega centers’ delay Lebanon’s parliamentary elections?

By NAJIA HOUSSARI — arabnews.com — BEIRUT: The Lebanese government is expected to make a decision on Thursday on whether to set up so-called mega centers to make it easier for people to vote in the country’s upcoming parliamentary elections. The aim of the facilities, which are favored by President Michel Aoun, is to allow voters to cast their ballots outside their area of registration, meaning they would not have to return to their hometowns to do so. However, it has been suggested that if the centers are created it could lead to the elections, currently scheduled for May 15, being delayed. After a ministerial committee completed a report into the issue, the Cabinet must now decide how to proceed based on its findings. If it approves the idea, a draft law would have to be submitted to parliament to allow the centers to be created. While Aoun’s camp said that “no legal measures were necessary to adopt the mega centers. It is very easy if the political intent is there,” the opposition said that “the issue requires legal amendments and will result in a very high financial cost.”

In the committee’s report, Tourism Minister Walid Nassar said: “The cost of establishing eight mega centers … does not exceed $2 million and they can be completed in no more than three weeks.” But Interior Minister Bassam Mawlawi said the technical requirements of setting up the facilities would lead to disruption. “The ministerial committee is against postponing the elections and insists on holding them on the designated date without any delay,” he said. The disruption would be caused by the need for the centers to have the “necessary principles and requirements in order to have a sound election,” he said. “It is not a tent that can be set up in neighborhoods with a ballot box on top of a table. It is way more complicated. “Mega centers without electronic connection, fiber optics and a central server that provides the necessary linkage are not actual mega centers, unless they want them to be like tents.” He added: “The company that will be in charge of this project will need up to three months to complete the task and link the main electoral centers to the mother server. Moreover, what applies to the Lebanese voters living outside the country should apply to voters residing in the country.”

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What Google, Amazon and Microsoft revealed about Ukraine’s cyber situation

by venturebeat.com — Kyle Alspach — With limited information coming out of Ukraine about cyberattacks hitting the country, findings from tech giants Google, Amazon and Microsoft disclosed in recent days have provided a window into the cyber conditions in Ukraine as Russia’s brutal assault continues. All three companies have said they are providing cybersecurity support to Ukraine, whose government said on Saturday that it has been seeing “nonstop” distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) attacks by “Russian hackers” since Russia’s invasion on February 24. However, as evidenced by the latest reports from Google, Amazon and Microsoft, Ukraine’s computing infrastructure has been the victim of more than just DDoS attacks amid Russia’s unprovoked military campaign (though we still have yet to learn of a crippling cyberattack against electricity, water and communications infrastructure).

Google, Amazon and Microsoft have a view into the security threat landscape through operating massive cloud computing platforms, applications used by many governments and businesses and a number of security solutions. AWS continues to maintain its lead in the market for cloud infrastructure services, according to Synergy Research Group, followed by Microsoft Azure at No. 2 and Google Cloud at No. 3. What follows are the latest details that Google, Amazon and Microsoft have revealed about Ukraine’s cyber situation.

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