Saturday, October 05, 2024

Israel Bombs Beirut Targets as Iran Calls on Arab World to Unite

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Israel Bombs Beirut Targets as Iran Calls on Arab World to Unite
H.Meyer, D.Khraiche, G.Motevalli
Image by chekat via iStock
Israel carried out huge bombing raids on Hezbollah targets near Beirut airport alongside ground attacks in southern Lebanon, while Iran’s leader called on the Arab world to unite amid the escalating conflict.
The airstrikes in the southern outskirts of the Lebanese capital targeted the potential successor of the militant group’s assassinated leader Hassan Nasrallah and other figures, the New York Times and other US media reported, citing Israeli officials. 
It was not known if Hashem Safieddine died in the bombardment, which residents said shook buildings in the city.
Iran's Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei Emerges, Leads Friday Prayers Amid  Israel Tensions | India Today - YouTube
Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei — leading Friday prayers in Tehran for the first time since January 2020 — told a huge crowd the Islamic Republic will strike again if necessary, having so far delivered the “minimum punishment” possible to Israel. He urged Arab and Muslim countries to unite against what he described as a common enemy. 
“We’ll neither hesitate nor rush in fulfilling our duties,” Khamenei said.
Since last month, Israel has stepped up a campaign to eliminate threats from Iran-backed Hezbollah, killing much of its top leadership and sending troops into southern Lebanon for the first time since a 2006 war. The Israel Defense Forces said Friday it’s killed Hezbollah militants from the air and at close range. Troops recovered rocket launchers and other weapons during the operations, the IDF said.
Iran fired 200 ballistic missiles at Israel on Tuesday night in retaliation for the attacks on Hezbollah and the killing of a Hamas leader in July, and Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has vowed to respond. That’s raised fears of major tit-for-tat attacks that could trigger a region-wide war and drag in the US, Israel’s main ally.

Iran’s Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi travelled to Beirut on Friday and met with Lebanese Prime Minister Najib Mikati.
He said a diplomatic solution is needed to stop Israel’s bombardment of Lebanon and Gaza, according to a statement by the ministry’s spokesman.

Oil surged on Thursday when US President Joe Biden, responding to a question about whether the US would support Israeli assaults on Iran’s oil infrastructure, said: “We’re discussing that. I think that would be a little — anyways.”

Brent extended gains Friday, heading for its strongest weekly increase in two years.
Israeli assets have been hit, with the shekel down 2.5% against the dollar this week, one of the worst performers globally.
Israel vows retaliation for Iran attack as its strikes kill 25 in Lebanon
Uploaded: Oct 5, 2024
The Israeli army has said it will respond to Iran’s missile attack in ‘manner, location and time’ of its choosing.

Houthi Red Sea Attacks Still torment Global Trade, a Year after October 7 | Al Jazeera

“The crisis is becoming complicated and more countries are getting involved. Some experts are of the view that things might change after the US presidential election, but I have doubts,” . . . .
Six weeks after Hamas launched the deadliest attack on Israel in the country’s history last October, the Palestinian group’s Houthi allies in Yemen seized control of a British-owned cargo ship in the Red Sea.
The Houthis’ audacious hijacking of the Galaxy Leader would mark the start of a sustained campaign of missile and drone attacks against commercial shipping in one of the world’s most important trade routes.

Houthi Red Sea attacks still torment global trade, a year after October 7


Yemen’s rebel group has launched some 130 attacks in the crucial waterway since the start of the war in Gaza.



As the war in Gaza approaches the one-year mark on October 7, Houthi attacks are still disrupting commercial shipping, exposing the vulnerability of the supply chains that form the backbone of international trade.
While a United States-led international force has been able to thwart many attacks, commercial ships continue to be targeted and operators remain hesitant to use the waterway, raising the likelihood that trade will continue to suffer as long as conflict persists in the Middle East.
“Until a broader peace agreement is reached, the risks in the Red Sea are unlikely to diminish significantly,” Majo George, a professor at the Business School of RMIT University Vietnam, told Al Jazeera.
“In the meantime, shipping companies are expected to continue avoiding the Red Sea in favor of safer, but costlier, alternatives.”
  • The Houthis, which like Hamas are backed by Iran, carried out 130 attacks in the Red Sea between the start of the war and September 20, according to the nonprofit, Armed Conflict Location and Event Data (ACLED).
  • Most of the attacks were directed at commercial shipping, although some targeted Israel or US military vessels.
The Yemeni group has said that it considers any ship linked to Israel or its allies a target, casting its attacks as a show of support for Palestinians facing Israeli bombardment in Gaza. However, it has also attacked vessels with no obvious connection to the conflict. More than 41,700 Palestinians have been killed in Israel’s war on Gaza over the past year.
Houthis
Flames and smoke rise from Greek-flagged oil tanker Sounion after a Houthi attack in the Red Sea [Houthi Military Media/Handout via Reuters]
Even though the number of ships targeted is low relative to the volume of traffic, the Houthis’ strategy has proven effective at raising shipping costs, including insurance and pay for sailors working in high-risk areas, said Stig Jarle Hansen, an associate professor at the Norwegian University of Life Sciences.
“The success rate of Houthi attacks is low, but they don’t need to hit accurately, as long as they manage to scare international actors, they have achieved a victory, since they increase insurance prices and thus cause increased costs around the world,” Hansen told Al Jazeera.
Cargo traffic through the Suez Canal, which links the Red Sea and the Mediterranean and carried 10-15 percent of global trade before the war, has plummeted as shipping companies have moved to reroute shipments around the southern tip of Africa.
  • As of mid-September, average daily transits through the Suez Canal stood at 29, compared with about 80 last October, according to PortWatch, a database run by the IMF in collaboration with Oxford University.
  • Over the same period, average daily trade volume dropped from about 4.89 million metric tonnes to 1.36 million metric tonnes, according to PortWatch.
“Clearly, the attacks must stop,” Anna Nagurney, an expert on logistics and supply chains at the Isenberg School of Management, UMass Amherst, told Al Jazeera.
“The Suez Canal, built over 150 years ago, is a critical supply chain network link for global trade and there are many ancillary repercussions, including Egypt receiving much reduced payments for its use.
“Without efficient, safe, cost-effective transportation routes trade disruptions will continue with added delays and costs,” Nagurney added.
  • For shipping lines, rerouting trade around the Cape of Good Hope has increased transit times by 10-14 days and pushed up freight rates as much as threefold at certain periods during the past year.
“This rerouting incurs approximately $1m in additional fuel costs per trip,” George said.
“Beyond the financial burden, the extended routes contribute to higher greenhouse gas emissions due to increased fuel consumption, further exacerbating environmental concerns.”
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A photo released by the European Union’s Operation Aspides shows warships attached to the mission escorting salvage ships in the Red Sea on September 14, 2024 [European Union’s Operation Aspides via AP]
Elevated shipping costs also threaten to push up the cost of everyday goods.
  • In February, JP Morgan Research estimated that the disruptions in the Red Sea could add 0.7 percentage points to global core goods inflation during the first half of 2024 if higher container shipping costs were to persist.
  • The Centre for Economic Policy Research, a London-based nonprofit, has estimated that global inflation could rise by an additional 0.18 percentage points in 2024 and 0.23 percentage points in 2025 if the de facto closure of the Suez Canal is not resolved before the end of this year.
While there is wide agreement on the need for cooperation among countries to minimise disruptions to global trade, analysts see limited options for effectively responding to the Houthi campaign as long as the group is determined to keep launching attacks.
Hansen said that the US and United Kingdom air strikes on Houthi targets in Yemen were 
  • more “symbolic than having real value” and 
  • governments would be better off boosting their capabilities to intercept missiles and drones in the waterway.
  • “It did not scare the Houthis,” he said.
The Houthis, he said, “were able to hide and secure much of the equipment needed to launch attacks. When intervening militarily it becomes important to assess the possibilities for success, otherwise one can save both lives and money by abstaining.”
Jayanta Kumar Seal, a professor of accounting and finance at the Indian Institute of Foreign Trade, said it was hard to see a breakthrough in the crisis without an end to the conflict in the region.
“The crisis is becoming complicated and more countries are getting involved. Some experts are of the view that things might change after the US presidential election, but I have doubts,” 
---Seal told Al Jazeera.
“We must find some alternatives. The Cape of Good Hope is a much longer route and increases the transit time and freight and other costs substantially.”
Source: Al Jazeera

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