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Sat, 16 Oct 2021
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Arctic in flames: Geopolitical power struggle over icy continent

power struggle in Arctic
Of all the theaters of militarized international rivalry in the early 21st century, the Arctic promises to be the most complex and unpredictable. In terms of domain, military operations there would be conducted on land, in the air, on the sea surface, but also in the depths of the Arctic Ocean under ice cover. The geographic remoteness and climactic harshness of the climate and terrain mean any conflict there would be fought the gaze of international media or citizen reporters. Next to the Antarctic, the Arctic is one of the few areas of the global commons that has not yet been apportioned among the major and minor powers. And the stakes for all the players are quite high.

Military presence in the Arctic and extension of one's national sovereignty over it promises to yield the interested states and alliances with several sets of benefits. The first and most obvious is the access to copious natural resources, starting with hydrocarbons, lurking under the still relatively unexplored continental shelf there. The second one is the surveillance and/or control over maritime shipping routes whose importance will only increase as polar ice cover retreats. Thirdly, the Arctic does include some militarily very valuable real estate, in the form of great many islands and archipelagoes that may be used for advanced military outposts and bases.


Comment: Polar ice cover is not likely to retreat - before it actually increases.



Propaganda

Russian-death-to-duck reporters of the New York Times told to lie about Russian role in American police violence by seven government officials

police duck, Julian Barnes, Adam Goldman

New York Times reporters Julian Barnes and Adam Goldman
Just over a year ago, five New York Times reporters published lies about the dead ducks they were told had been killed by Russian assassins running amok in the English town of Salisbury with a poison they called Novichok. This was a lie which came from the deputy director of the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), Gina Haspel. She told her lie to President Donald Trump, who promoted her to head the CIA a few days later. She then handed the lie to the reporters to print as proof of how much the President trusted her.

Two of the reporters, called Julian Barnes (lead image, centre) and Adam Goldman (right), refused to explain, retract or apologise for repeating Haspel's lie as if it was the truth. They stuck to the lie even after the Salisbury authorities announced there had been no dead ducks. Instead, after three weeks of what Barnes called "research", Haspel told them to print that she had shown Trump "pictures illustrating the consequences of nerve agent attacks, not images specific to the chemical attack in Britain". That was a correction of the photographs, not of the lies which Haspel had told Trump, and the reporters continued to repeat.

Barnes and Goldman have now repeated more lies, this time about police violence against blacks in the US. The lies are occurring because "the Russian government has stepped up efforts to inflame racial tensions in the United States as part of its bid to influence November's presidential election." This time Barnes and Goldman repeat the lying because "seven American officials briefed on recent intelligence" told them to say so. The seven told the two to print that on March 10. Now look what has happened.

Control Panel

Utterly predictable: Bolivian Parliament summons Jeanine Áñez to clarify corruption scandal

Jeanine Áñez

Jeanine Áñez
The coup d'état carried out in Bolivia was the starting point for a major wave of social, political and economic setbacks in the country. Bolivia is the poorest country in South America, with very high poverty rates, however, during the years of Evo Morales, the country's growth was enormous, reaching the point of being the South American country with the greatest economic growth. The seizure of power by the coup d'état represented the return of the worst growth rates, in addition to a huge escalation of violence against indigenous populations - extremely respected previously by Evo Morales - and gigantic corruption scandals.

Bolivia's interim president, Jeanine Añez, recently proved the nature behind the new government by being indicted in a lawsuit. Añez and the Minister of Foreign Affairs, Karen Longaric, were the first people summoned to provide information for a current investigation. The charge against both is of involvement in corruption networks during the purchase of ventilators and other medical supplies to - supposedly - fight the pandemic.

The corruption scandal in Bolivia started a few weeks ago, when health professionals reported that the Spanish ventilators acquired by the Bolivian State were of low quality and unfit for hospital use with the purpose of facing a pandemic. According to official sources, the Bolivian government has spent more than $ 27,000 on each device (about 170 devices), while domestic producers (Bolivians) charge about $ 1,000.

Comment: Who would have thought that one of the lead actors in the coup against Evo Morales would turn out to be corrupt and conniving? We're shocked. See also:


Snakes in Suits

US 'not relying on Russia anymore' & keeping China on the outside: Trump campaign manager turns SpaceX launch into politics

Pence
© Reuters / Jonathan Ernst
Donald Trump, Mike Pence and his wife Karen Pence watch the launch of a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket in Florida, May 30, 2020
Two NASA astronauts had barely taken off from the Kennedy Space Center when the achievement was already being politicized back on Earth. To the Trump campaign, it was an opportunity to blast Joe Biden and the Chinese government.

NASA Astronauts Robert Behnken and Douglas Hurley successfully launched from the Kennedy Space Center in Florida on Saturday, en route to the International Space Station in a capsule developed by Elon Musk's SpaceX corporation.

The launch marks the first time since 2011 that NASA has sent astronauts into space from American soil, and the first time in history that a private company has sent humans into space.

Telephone

France, Britain, Germany "deeply regret" US scrapping sanctions waivers on JCPOA-related projects in Iran

iran
© AFP 2020 / BEHROUZ MEHRI
The United States announced on Wednesday it will terminate sanctions waivers that had allowed Russian, Chinese and European companies to carry out work at Iranian nuclear sites as part of the JCPOA nuclear deal.

France, Germany and Britain issued a joint statement on Saturday, voicing their profound regret over Washington's recently announced move to eliminate sanctions waivers allowing work on Iranian sites designed to prevent nuclear weapons development, reported Reuters.

"We deeply regret the U.S. decision to end the three waivers," reads a joint statement by the three European countries.

Attention

James Corbett: What in the world is happening?

What is Happening?
© Corbett Report
OK, I get it. You're sick of hearing about it.

"There must be something else happening in the world," I hear you saying.

Well, you're in luck! I did some digging and it turns out there are other things happening in the world, after all! Things that have nothing to do with viruses or masks or vaccines or contact tracers. (Or, at least, as little to do with those things as possible, given the circumstances.)

Here are a few of them:

Bad Guys

Turkey hasn't won in Libya yet, Russia hasn't lost, but US, Greece, Cyprus and Israel are losing everything

erdogan haftar
If the war in Libya continues the way Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan thinks it has gone in recent days, the Eastern Mediterranean will be a Turkish sea for the first time since Napoleon defeated the Ottomans and took Egypt and Syria between 1798 and 1801. But with Russia engaged against the Turks on the ground, in the air and at sea, not yet.

In escalation of the civil war in Libya in April and this month, Turkey has added ground forces from Syria, as well as Navy frigates, Air Force F-16s, and the capture of the Al-Watiya air base west of Tripoli. The Turkish side has now created a reinforced corridor for ship and airborne supplies of men and arms into Libya in support of the Government of National Accord (GNA) led by Fayez al-Sarraj.

The Greek Air Force has watched the Turks go by with aerial antics and diplomatic protests amounting to a white flag. No Greek or Cypriot military source has issued an appreciation, let alone criticism of this historic rout of the Hellenes in their own territorial waters.

Russia has reinforced the capability of the Libyan National Army of General Khalifa Haftar to deter the Turks and in an operation with MiG-29s early this week attacked a Turkish frigate off the Libyan coast and a Turkish freighter in Tripoli port.

The US has taken the Turkish side, announcing through Army General Stephen Townsend, commander of the US Africa Command in Frankfurt: "Russia is clearly trying to tip the scales in its favor in Libya. Just like I saw them doing in Syria."

Detailed Russian situation briefs from the General Staff's military intelligence agency (GRU) have been appearing in Vzglyad, the internet analytical publication in Moscow. In the translation to follow, a strategic assessment by Gevorg Mirzayan indicates what is now at stake in Libya.

Telephone

Transcripts of Flynn-Kislyak calls released, revealing fateful talks over Russia sanctions

flynn kislyak

General Michael Fly and Russian ambassador to the United States, Sergey Kislyak
Outgoing acting DNI Grenell declassifies transcripts of calls between Michael Flynn and Russian Amb. Kislyak

Transcripts of phone conversations that took place in December 2016 between then-national security adviser designate Michael Flynn and then-Russian Ambassador Sergey Kislyak were released Friday, detailing the discussions that would later lead to Flynn's FBI interview and subsequent charges.

Fox News first obtained the transcripts and summaries of Flynn's calls with Kislyak. The transcripts were transmitted to Sens. Ron Johnson, R-Wis., and Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, by Director of National Intelligence John Ratcliffe. Johnson and Grassley later released the documents publicly.

The documents include a key Dec. 29, 2016 conversation in which Flynn repeatedly urged Russia not to dramatically escalate tensions in response to sanctions imposed by the outgoing Obama Administration over election interference.

Comment: Criminals one and all, and run from the very top. May the indictments come down soon.


Doberman

Trump warned protestors would've faced 'vicious dogs' and 'ominous weapons' if crowd breached White House fence during George Floyd rally

President Donald Trump
© Erin Schaff-Pool/Getty Images
President Donald Trump speaks during a meeting with industry executives on the reopening of the US economy in the State Dining Room May 29, 2020 in Washington, DC before protests erupted across the country.
President Donald Trump commented on the protests that raged outside the White House late Friday by commending Secret Service agents on their response before warning protestors.

In a series of tweets posted Saturday morning, Trump praised the agents as "totally professional" and "very cool" before warning protestors that if any had approached the White House fence, they "would have been greeted with the most vicious dogs, and most ominous weapons, I have ever seen."

Comment: This is just one of many protests currently underway across the US in reaction to the killing of George Floyd.

See also:


Arrow Up

Trump plans to remove special treatment for Hong Kong

Trump
© MANDEL NGAN AFP
US President Donald Trump
President Donald Trump on Friday announced he would begin taking steps to revoke Hong Kong's favored trade status with the United States, in response to a controversial new security law passed by China's parliament that would effectively bar political protest in Hong Kong.

"I am directing my administration to begin the process of eliminating policy exemptions that give Hong Kong different and special treatment," Trump said during a Rose Garden event at the White House.

"My announcement today will affect the full range of agreements that we have with Hong Kong, from our extradition treaty, to our export controls and technologies," Trump said. "We will take action to revoke Hong Kong's preferential treatment as a separate customs and travel territory from the rest of China."