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Daily Scope: Syrian Cities Bombed, Russian-American Accord Downed, Lebanese Dialog Hindered

Daily Scope: Syrian Cities Bombed, Russian-American Accord Downed, Lebanese Dialog Hindered
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Daily Scope: Syrian Cities Bombed, Russian-American Accord Downed, Lebanese Dialog Hindered

LEBANESE DAILIES

Zeinab Daher

As-Safir

American Fraud Downs "Accord" with the Russians

Dozens of Victims in Terrorist Blasts from Tartous to Damascus

New Documents: Paris Attacks Would Have Been Bloodier

G20: Freeing Trade, and the Refugees Crisis


Al-Binaa
Kerry, Lavrov Resume Negotiations in China, Erdogan Hopes for Agreement before Eid

De Mistura Expects Presidential Summits in New York that Finalize Syria Agreements

Syria... and the Future of American-Russian Accord

National Dialogue Imbalanced, Unrest in the Government Awaiting Mediations


Al-Akhbar
Aleppo Siege Expands: The Battle Identifies the Negotiations' Limits

Yemeni Forces in Progress on Western Borders: Army, Committees Fortify Positions on Red Sea

National Dialogue Table Precedes Government to Paralysis

"Israel": Ron Arad Died 20 Years Ago


Al-Joumhouria

Al-Joumhouria Publishes the National Dialogue Session Record

Will Aoun be Elected President in the 45th Session?

Selecting the most important issues dealt with in the Sept. 6, 2016 editions of the Lebanese dailies, we came up to you with the following:

Daily Scope: Syrian Cities Bombed, Russian-American Accord Downed, Lebanese Dialog Hindered

As-Safir newspaper shed the light on the international developments regarding the Syrian crisis, as well as several interrelated issues on the political level.


American Fraud Downs "Accord" with the Russians

On this issue, Mohammad Ballout wrote that the Russian-American agreement was almost done before it returned to its initial form. The G20 meetings between Presidents Barack Obama and Vladimir Putin failed in producing the agreement on which the political process should have been formed.

There was significant Russian-American optimism to reach such agreement during the summit. In this regard, the international envoy, Staffan de Mistura, was asked to set a new map to Geneva, which inspires the expected agreements to put Syria's political resolution on track.

However, the accord failed due to the American's attempts to abuse the narrowed options for Russia in Syria, to let them compromise after they couldn't have offered such compromises in the past.

In the last minutes of negotiations, the Americans became stricter as they knew that the Russians are racing time to find a Syrian resolution before the end of the Obama administration, fearing the more aggressive Hillary Clinton, and being obliged to go militarily deeper in Syria.


Dozens of Victims in Terrorist Blasts from Tartous to Damascus

Ziyad Haidar
Few Days after the Syrian army's decision to remove several checkpoints spread on the Homs-Tartous, a booby-trapped car reached the city and exploded at the main checkpoint at the end of the city.

The Tartous bomb, the second in this summer, came in parallel with several bombs blasting Homs, al-Hassakeh and Damascus, although less destructive. The total explosions, which left some 48 victims, were claimed by "Daesh".

The Tartous blast was somehow surprising, especially that the city was under strict security measures following the huge blasts that went off in May.

At the time, officials spoke of minding the security gaps in the city for a short period before many military checkpoints were canceled "to facilitate the citizens' movement."


New Documents: Paris Attacks Would Have Been Bloodier

American CNN network has received thousands of photos and documents from European sources informed with the special investigations on the Paris attacks late November. The footage showed that "Daesh" didn't only aim at trembling Paris' security, but also to target several cities in different European cities.

The documents note that "Daesh" advanced network, responsible for foreign attacks, planned to follow Paris attacks with bloodier ones in many European cities.

The 90 thousands documents required months of work and follow-up by the CNN staff. They include huge amount of information resulting from the investigations and data from the mobiles. Such data identify the branch responsible for Daesh's foreign attacks known as "foreign security".


For its part al- Binaa newspaper summed up the international scene as follows:

Follow-ups of the coming two weeks agreements are moving from Beijing to New York, where the UN General Assembly annual round will be held.

It is expected to be attended by world top leaders in which international envoy Staffan de Mistura linked to the possible resolutions in Syria.

Meanwhile, Russian FM Sergey Lavrov and US Secretary of State John Kerry resume their talks in what Russian President Vladimir Putin described as an important step.

In parallel, sights eye the Aleppo battle to read between the lines of the negotiators' words. Moscow cannot offer conciliation prizes for those who lose the balance they created in the battlefield.

For his part, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan harbored hopes for reaching agreements before the Adha Eid next week.

Meanwhile, battles in southwest Aleppo are drawing new maps that would result in the opposite of the American hopes, where the al-Nusra and other militant groups are declining in front of the Syrian army and allies.

On the Lebanese level, the distinguished event was the imbalance in the national dialogue after a fight erupted between Minister Jubran Bassil and MP Suleiman Franjieh. The misunderstanding circulated around the Christian representation upon which chartism is based.

Bassil described the Christian representation in the Lebanese cabinet with 6%. Then Franjieh called him the one who failed in the elections. Although things were settled, but the fight caused the dialogue session to end until further notice.

The results eventually affected the government.

Source: al-Ahed News

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