US Official: Iranian Fuel Shipment is a 'PR Stunned by Hezbollah'

US President Joe Biden’s nominee for Assistant Secretary of State for Near Eastern Affairs, Barbara Leaf.
US President Joe Biden’s nominee for Assistant Secretary of State for Near Eastern Affairs, Barbara Leaf.
TT

US Official: Iranian Fuel Shipment is a 'PR Stunned by Hezbollah'

US President Joe Biden’s nominee for Assistant Secretary of State for Near Eastern Affairs, Barbara Leaf.
US President Joe Biden’s nominee for Assistant Secretary of State for Near Eastern Affairs, Barbara Leaf.

US President Joe Biden’s nominee for Assistant Secretary of State for Near Eastern Affairs, Barbara Leaf, has described an Iranian fuel shipment that arrived in Lebanon on Thursday as a Hezbollah trick to improve its reputation.

During a Senate confirmation hearing for the nominations of Assistant Secretaries, Representative to NATO and Ambassador to France, Leaf said the shipment would not solve Lebanon’s deep energy and economic problems.

“This energy solution is frankly a PR stunned by Hezbollah,” she said.

The official later spoke about US ambassador to Lebanon Dorothy Shea’s proposed plan that involves bringing electricity from Egypt through Jordan to Lebanon via Syria and whether this plan complies with the Caesar Act.

She said the issue of the acute energy crisis in Lebanon is side by side with the general disintegration of the economy, which is having a terrible effect across society.

“There is a regionally proposed solution, which our partners Egypt and Jordan have teamed together to look at the issue of electricity and natural gas to get it across Syria into Lebanon. This project is endorsed by the World Bank. So, the State Department is looking at it carefully within the framework of the US laws and sanctions policy and of course the State Department will consult with the US Treasury Department on the way forward,” she said.

The US official stressed that Shea’s plan offers the prospect of a cheaper, cleaner and defensible solution, in addition to a short-term fix to what is a larger and terrible problem in Lebanon.

Also, Leaf welcomed the formation of a new government, which she said is the first step, after 13 months, to start economic reforms.

“This government having been formed is only the first minimal step on what has to be a long road of structural economic reform, which will then unlock international financing loans and other forms of foreign assistance,” she explained.

Leaf made it clear there is no rescue coming to Lebanon from the outside. “The solution lies in Lebanese hands. But it is going to be long.”

Leaf stressed the Biden administration’s continuous support for the Lebanese Army, saying it is Washington’s priority.

For his part, chair of the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee Senator Bob Menendez said he helped write the Caesar Act and does not want to give relief to the Assad regime in Syria.

“However, in this particular case and for these particular circumstances, if the Department makes a determination that this is the only impediment towards an agreement for energy flow into Lebanon, I will ask them to come to me because it is important to find a way forward,” Menendez said.



Evacuations and Call for Aid as Typhoon Usagi Approaches Philippines

A villager on a wooden boat paddles on a flooded village caused by Typhoon Toraji in Tuguegarao city, Cagayan city, Philippines, 13 November 2024. (EPA)
A villager on a wooden boat paddles on a flooded village caused by Typhoon Toraji in Tuguegarao city, Cagayan city, Philippines, 13 November 2024. (EPA)
TT

Evacuations and Call for Aid as Typhoon Usagi Approaches Philippines

A villager on a wooden boat paddles on a flooded village caused by Typhoon Toraji in Tuguegarao city, Cagayan city, Philippines, 13 November 2024. (EPA)
A villager on a wooden boat paddles on a flooded village caused by Typhoon Toraji in Tuguegarao city, Cagayan city, Philippines, 13 November 2024. (EPA)

The Philippines ordered evacuations Wednesday ahead of Typhoon Usagi's arrival, as the UN's disaster office sought $32.9 million in aid for the country after recent storms killed more than 150 people.

The national weather service said Usagi -- the archipelago's fifth major storm in three weeks -- would likely make landfall Thursday in Cagayan province on the northeast tip of main island Luzon.

Provincial civil defense chief Rueli Rapsing said mayors had been ordered to evacuate residents in vulnerable areas, by force if necessary, as the 120 kilometers (75 miles) an hour typhoon bears down on the country.

"Under (emergency protocols), all the mayors must implement the forced evacuation, especially for susceptible areas," he told AFP, adding as many as 40,000 people in the province lived in hazard-prone areas.

The area is set to be soaked in "intense to torrential" rain on Thursday and Friday, which can trigger floods and landslides with the ground still sodden from recent downpours, state weather forecaster Christopher Perez told reporters.

He urged residents of coastal areas to move inland due to the threat of storm surges and giant coastal waves up to three meters (nine feet) high, with shipping also facing the peril of 8–10-meter waves.

A sixth tropical storm, Man-yi, is expected to strengthen into a typhoon before hitting the center of the country as early as Friday, Perez said.

With more than 700,000 people forced out of their homes, the successive storms have taken a toll on the resources of both the government and local households, the UN said late Tuesday.

About 210,000 of those most affected by recent flooding need support for "critical lifesaving and protection efforts over the next three months", the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs said in a statement.

"Typhoons are overlapping. As soon as communities attempt to recover from the shock, the next tropical storm is already hitting them again," UN Philippines Resident and Humanitarian Coordinator Gustavo Gonzalez said.

"In this context, the response capacity gets exhausted and budgets depleted."

The initiative "will help us mobilize the capacities and resources of the humanitarian community to better support government institutions at national, regional and local levels," Gonzalez added.

More than 28,000 people displaced by recent storms are still living in evacuation centers operated by local governments, the country's civil defense office said in its latest tally.

Government crews were still working to restore downed power and communication lines and clearing debris from roads.

About 20 big storms and typhoons hit the archipelago nation or its surrounding waters each year, killing scores of people and keeping millions in enduring poverty.

A recent study showed that storms in the Asia-Pacific region are increasingly forming closer to coastlines, intensifying more rapidly and lasting longer over land due to climate change.