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The tyrannical corporate trade deal, the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP), is increasingly facing a
multitude of challenges that threaten to derail the entire agreement. With negotiations officially beginning in 2013, US
trade officials were arrogantly forecasting that a deal would have been reached by the end of 2014. Today in 2016, 14 rounds of intense negotiations later, there is a serious potential that a deal will not be reached by the end of this year, if at all.
There are, and will continue to be, many implications of the momentous Brexit vote; but one implication that has got less media coverage than it deserves is how it further impedes and complicates TTIP negotiations. In an
article for one of the most influential organisations in the UK, the Royal Institute for International Affairs (or Chatham House), Geo-Economics Fellow, Marianne Schneider-Petsinger, admits that the
Brexit vote is a "serious blow" to the chances of TTIP being concluded in the immediate future. Petsinger argues that as Britain was one of greatest advocates for TTIP within the EU, the
US has lost an important partner who shares Washington's fervour for corporate fascism. Petsinger adds that even though a British exit from the EU will severely delay negotiations, TTIP will still survive the vote.
Comment: Russia understands the Chinese situation better than most because it experiences the same covert warfare and policies of 'containment' from the US that China has. To say Russia isn't an ally of China because it has no treaty like the US does with the Philippines or Japan is disingenuous. Those treaties make these counties vassals of the US, not allies. The US has no allies in the world - only pawns and inferiors in their eyes that it uses to maintain its hegemony. Russia has its plate full and it knows where and when to choose its battles.
See also: Pepe Escobar: The Hague's South China Sea ruling puts China between a rock and a hard place