In this mailing:
- Soeren Kern: State Department
Waging "Open War" on White House
- Khadija Khan: UK: How Much More
Abuse of Children Do We Permit?
- Amir Taheri: Why Iran's Plan
in Syria Will Fail
by Soeren Kern • September 17,
2017 at 5:00 am
- "It's
not clear to me why the Secretary of State wishes to at once
usurp the powers of the Congress and then to derail his boss's
rapprochement with the Israeli government." — Foreign
policy operative, quoted in the Washington Free Beacon.
- Since
he was sworn in as Secretary of State on February 1, Rex
Tillerson and his advisors at the State Department have made a
number of statements and policy decisions that contradict
President Trump's key campaign promises on foreign policy,
especially regarding Israel and Iran.
- "Tillerson
was supposed to clean house, but he left half of them in place
and he hid the other half in powerful positions all over the
building. These are career staffers committed to preventing
Trump from reversing what they created." — Veteran
foreign policy analyst, quoted in the Free Beacon.
Secretary
of State Rex Tillerson (left) and President Donald J. Trump (right)
on February 1, 2017. (Image source: Michael Reynolds-Pool/Getty
Images)
The U.S. State Department has backed away from a
demand that Israel return $75 million in military aid which was
allocated to it by the U.S. Congress.
The repayment demand, championed by U.S. Secretary
of State Rex Tillerson, was described as an underhanded attempt by
the State Department to derail a campaign pledge by U.S. President
Donald J. Trump to improve relations with the Jewish state.
The dispute is the just the latest example of what
appears to be a growing power struggle between the State Department
and the White House over the future direction of American foreign
policy.
The controversy goes back to the Obama
administration's September 2016 Memorandum of Understanding (MOU)
with Israel, which pledged $38 billion in military assistance to
Jerusalem over the next decade. The MOU expressly prohibits Israel
from requesting additional financial aid from Congress.
by Khadija Khan • September 17,
2017 at 4:30 am
- How
is it that we never see demands for legislation to ban
dragging young girls into a system of misogynistic beliefs?
- The
West accepts pampering these extremists in the name of freedom
of expression when these extremists themselves do not believe
in any such freedom.
- Female
genital mutilation (FGM), despite having been banned since
1985, takes place in the UK every hour. This criminal
behavior is made possible only by the British authorities'
indifference.
London
Mayor Sadiq Khan issued a belated apology for depicting -- in a
public-service ad -- a small girl in a headscarf as representative
of a Muslim minor. (Image source: Transport for London, Richard
Heathcote/Getty Images)
London Mayor Sadiq Khan, who is also chairman of
Transport for London (TfL), has issued a belated apology for
depicting -- in an advertisement launched by the Children's Traffic
Club London (created by TfL to promote traffic safety) -- a small
girl in a headscarf as representative of a Muslim minor. In Islam,
headscarves are not usually worn until a girl has reach puberty. The
Independent reported: "TfL apologised for any offence
caused and said the images will be removed from the campaign.
London Mayor Sadiq Khan, chair of TfL, also apologised for the
campaign".
The apology, however, sounds more like just lip
service: none of the British authorities has bothered to notice the
escalating trend of making Muslim baby girls wear a veil.
It took a campaign advertisement to make them
realize how a headscarf, the hijab, a symbol of modesty, might be
abusive to the minor girls by seemingly sexualizing them at an
early age.
by Amir Taheri • September 17,
2017 at 4:00 am
Syrian
football fans at the September 5 Iran-Syria qualifying match, in
Tehran, Iran. (Image source: Ruptly video screenshot)
For the past week or so, Iranian official media and
social networks have been abuzz with anecdotes woven around a
football match in Tehran between Iran and Syria and the light it
might shed on a complicated relationship.
According to most accounts, a group of Syrians flown
in by special charter to cheer their national squad in its bid for
a place in the World Cup in Moscow staged an anti-Iran
demonstration in the stadium. The Syrian contingent included young
ladies who refused to wear the Iranian-style hijab.
Their presence in the stadium highlighted the fact
that no Iranian woman is allowed to attend a football match after a
fatwa by the "Supreme Guide" that women watching
young men running around with bare legs might cause "undue
excitement"
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