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China rejects US 'sanctions' on Iranian oil, vows to protect its energy security

Oil tanker
© Reuters / Stringer
Oil tankers docked in Nantong, China
China will not jeopardize its energy security and will continue to import Iranian oil, a top diplomat said, rejecting the unilateral US crusade against the Islamic Republic at the expense of a cornerstone non-proliferation deal.

"We do not support the US policy of reducing Iran's oil exports to zero," Fu Cong, director-general of the Chinese foreign ministry's department of arms control said in Vienna.

"We reject the unilateral imposition of sanctions," the diplomat added, on the sidelines of talks aimed at preserving the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA), from which the US withdrew last year.

Comment: No doubt this is about more than just China's energy security: Far from quiet on the US vs Russia-China front

See also:


Hardhat

"Point of no return": Nord Stream 2 takes alternative route amid Danish stalling

nord stream 2
© Reuters / Anton Vaganov
The pipeline that would double the flow of natural gas from Russia to Germany will bypass Danish territory after authorities in Copenhagen dithered for 2 years without responding to permit request, the building consortium said.

Nord Stream 2 AG, the company building the pipeline under the Baltic Sea, said on Friday it would withdraw the permit application to lay the pipes southeast of the Danish island of Bornholm. The application was sent to the Danish Energy Agency (Energistyrelsen) in April 2017, but never received a response.

The measure was needed to protect the shareholders and European investors from Austria, France, Germany and the Netherlands from the risk of "further delays and financial losses," the consortium said in a statement. Applications for two other proposed routers, which would bypass Danish territorial waters, were filed in August 2018 and April this year, and are still pending.

Comment: See also:


Broom

Turkey launches strike on positions south of Idlib, Syria

syria turkey
© REUTERS / KHALIL ASHAWI
Earlier in the day, Ikhbariya broadcaster reported that the Turkish military had fired 18 mortars on the villages in Syria's Hama province from the south of Idlib.

Anadolu news agency reported Friday citing the Turkish Defence Ministry that the country's military shelled the area from where Turkey's observation post in Idlib had been attacked.

On Thursday, the Turkish Defence Ministry said one soldier had been killed and three had been injured in the shelling of one of its observation posts in Idlib. The ministry claimed that the shelling had been carried out from the areas controlled by the Syrian government forces and was deliberate.

The same day, Reuters reported that Russian attache had been summoned to the Turkish military headquarters amid the shellings.

Comment: See also: Explaining Russia's position on Idlib


Attention

Migrants, protests & aid cuts: A legacy of US-backed coups continues in Honduras

honduras migrants
© Reuters / Kim Kyung-Hoon
A migrant holds flags of Honduras and the United States next to US-Mexican border
As caravans of migrants stream toward the US border and protesters in Honduras demand the president's resignation, a coup in Tegucigalpa exactly 10 years ago is now making for strange political allies in Washington.

Congresswoman Ilhan Omar (D-Minnesota) thus found herself on the same wavelength as US President Donald Trump when she advocated cutting off the aid to the government of President Juan Orlando Hernandez in March, and tweeted out a photo with the daughter of the slain Honduran activist Berta Caceres on Friday.

Trump also wants to cut US funding to Honduras, but for a completely different reason: along with Guatemala and El Salvador, the country is a major source of migrant "caravans" that have been streaming across the US border over the past year. All three Central American nations have experienced Washington's meddling throughout their history.

On June 28, 2009, the Honduran military raided the home of President Manuel Zelaya and led him away at gunpoint. He was replaced by Porfirio Lobo Sosa, leader of the National Party, who held the office until 2014, when he handed it over to Hernandez.

Comment: See also:


NPC

AOC was facing an empty parking lot during 'emotional border protest'

Ocasio Cortez AOC concentration camp immigrant migrant parking lot
© Global Look Press / ZUMAPRESS.com
Clutching her face in despair and weeping, photos of Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez seemingly show her strong reaction to a horrific scene of US migrant detention. However, new angles reveal she may have played things up a bit.

While quite a few people noted that there was something a bit off about the congresswoman's photo shoot at a border detention policy protest that went viral this week, there was nothing concrete to indicate her insincerity... until one gets a look at the massive empty road and parking lot on the other side.

Blue Planet

A daunting agenda... sprinkled with wisecracks: Highlights from the Trump-Putin G20 talks

Putin Trump G20
© Sputnik / Mikhail Klimentyev
Russia's President Vladimir Putin and U.S. President Donald Trump attend a meeting on the sidelines of the G20 summit in Osaka
Donald Trump and Vladimir Putin had a full agenda when they met on the sidelines of the G20 Summit in Osaka. But the serious nature of their meeting did not stop the two leaders from enjoying several lighthearted moments together. 'Lots to discuss'

The US president was considerably more talkative than his Russian counterpart as the pair delivered brief remarks for the media before beginning their closed-door meeting on Friday.

Trump said that trade, disarmament and "a little protectionism" would be the primary topics of discussion. He predicted that "positive things" would result from his "very, very good relationship" with Putin.

"We're going to discuss a lot of different things," he added.

Comment: RT provides more detail of the meeting:
Putin noted that while the two leaders hadn't spoken face-to-face since the Helsinki summit last summer, US and Russian officials have been consulting with one another over the past year. The meeting in Osaka, Putin remarked, will allow the two leaders to "follow up" on discussions that have been taking place over the past 12 months.

[...]

While the Mueller report found no evidence that Trump "colluded" with the Kremlin, his meeting with Putin has predictably caused mass pandemonium among diehard Russiagaters.

The gathering raised further suspicion among Trump's most vocal critics after the president told a reporter that he would have a "good conversation" with Putin, but what they will discuss is "none of her business."



In an interview with the Financial Times before the meeting, Putin said he remained cautiously optimistic about the bilateral talks, while acknowledging that US-Russia relations have become "more dramatic and explosive."
At their G20 meeting, Russian President Vladimir Putin and US President Donald Trump discussed improving trade relations, including China in new arms control talks, and foreign policy disagreements.

A short readout of the talks provided by the White House said that both presidents agreed to improve relations between the US and Russia and "continue discussion" on arms control in the 21st century, which Trump said ought to include China as well. The two leaders also discussed the "situations" in Iran, Syria, Ukraine and Venezuela.

More details were provided by the Kremlin press secretary Dmitry Peskov, who praised Trump's "constructive approach" and desire to fix the "dismal" state of trade and economic relations between the US and Russia.

"We also note the readiness to start a conversation on serious topics of stability and disarmament, arms control... at the highest level," Peskov told reporters in Osaka on Friday.

"Let's learn to draw lessons from the past and move forward."

Trump raised the issue of Ukrainian Navy sailors detained by the Russian coast guard last November, after a 10-hour confrontation in the Kerch Strait. Putin "gave the necessary clarifications," Peskov told reporters.

The issue of Nord Stream 2 gas pipeline from Russia to Germany did not come up.

Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov called the meeting "very important and constructive."

Trump said that he would instruct his staff, who were present for the meeting, to follow up on the topics that were discussed with their counterparts in Moscow, Lavrov told reporters.

"We are ready for all these conversations," the foreign minister said. "Let's see what the American colleagues will do after this."
And finally from Zero Hedge:
[...]

"It's a great honor to be with President Putin," the president said, and called their relationship "very, very good."

And the two even shared a warm moment while discussing "fake news," per this classic exchange reported in Bloomberg:
The two leaders also bonded over journalism criticism. Trump complained to Putin about what he calls "fake news" in the U.S.

"You don't have this problem in Russia - we have, you don't have it," he said. Putin, who has cracked down on the independent media in his country, responded in English: "Yes, yes we have too. The same."
It was the second face to face meeting since July 2018, when the two controversially met alone in Helsinki, Finland. At that time Trump said he believed Putin's denials: "He just said it is not Russia," Trump said of election meddling charges after the Helsinki meeting. "I will say this. I don't see any reason why it would be."

The lighthearted brief exchange in response to reporters chaotically shouting questions and throwing out charges of Russian election meddling will likely be seized upon by the likes of Rachel Maddow and others as the latest "bombshell" proof of Trump and Putin being in cahoots.

A formal White House statement noted the two sought to improve relations in their Osaka meeting, especially following the break down of the the 1987 Intermediate-range Nuclear Forces Treaty, and the avoidance of a new arms race. The statement emphasized a "21st century model of arms control, which President Trump stated as needing to include China. The leaders also discussed the situations in Iran, Syria, Venezuela, and Ukraine."
See also:


Blue Planet

What kind of leader is Xi Jinping? China's futurism and meritocracy in brief

xi jin ping
What kind of leader is Xi Jinping?

He's somebody who will deal with shit. I mean it literally.

In 1974, Xi volunteered to go to Liangjiahe, a dirt-poor village in Northwestern China. His dad was getting the rough treatment during the Cultural Revolution, so he probably felt that getting out of Beijing was a safer move. So he volunteered.

There he was, second from the left.

China's GDP per capita in the 70's was around $100 per year, which is obviously not great. But Liangjiahe was a totally different ball game. It was a famously poor place. I would guess the GDP per capita was maybe $20 a year. No, I didn't miss any zeros. It was really that poor. There was no electricity, no indoor plumbing, no toilet, no heat, no rice or flour. Corn was a luxury, millet and wild grass were the normal diet. and people just dug dirt caves out of mountains to live. This was the cave Xi lived in at that time:

Comment: See also:


Chess

EU announces special trade channel, INSTEX operational; will allow firms to bypass US sanctions on Iran

JCPOA Joint Commission Vienna Austria June 2019
© Reuters / Leonhard Foeger
European and Iranian officials attend a meeting of the JCPOA Joint Commission in Vienna, Austria, June 28, 2019.
A special trade channel that will allow European firms to bypass American sanctions on Iran is operational - that was the outcome of the meeting between the countries who singed the nuclear deal ditched by US.

The EU called the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA) a "key element of global nuclear non-proliferation." The deal was in limbo after Washington left it a year ago and started piling up sanctions on Tehran, hampering its trade with other countries.

Now French, British and German officials say the trade mechanism, dubbed Instex, is operational. The mechanism would facilitate transactions between European and Iranian companies, bypassing the need for financial institutions like SWIFT to carry out exchanges. A payment balancing system will allow companies in Europe to buy Iranian goods, and vice-versa, without money-transfers between European and Iranian banks.

Comment: And the US tyrant is threatening MORE sanctions:


Handcuffs

'Sons of b*tches': Duterte says he will jail anyone who tries to impeach him

Duterte
Philippines President Rodrigo Duterte has threatened to imprison anyone who tries to impeach him over his stance on a fishing rights controversy involving China, and challenged his opponents to go ahead and try.

"Me? Will be impeached? I will jail them all," Duterte told reporters on Thursday amid an escalating national argument over territorial fishing rights. He went on to say that he was "challenging" his opponents to attempt it: "You really want to force my hand into it? Okay. You sons of b*tches, do it. Yes. File it."

Duterte is facing heavy criticism for allowing China to fish in the Philippines' exclusive economic zone (EEZ), and for agreeing with Beijing that the recent sinking of a fishing boat by a Chinese vessel was an accident.

Bad Guys

US Senate rejects proposal that would require president to have congressional approval before attacking foreign countries

us senate
© wikipedia.org / Dominio Público
Earlier, a bipartisan group of senators announced a legal proposal which would amend the 2020 National Defence Authorisation Act to require the president to seek congressional approval if he wanted to carry out military actions in foreign countries.

After heated deliberations which lasted over six hours, 41 senators voted to reject an amendment to the NDAA which would give them authority to block the president's military operations abroad, with the amendment's sponsors thus failing to reach the 60 vote supermajority required.

Presently, the president has the authority to authorise military operations against foreign countries using legislation granted to the Oval Office in the aftermath of the 9/11 terror attacks. The controversial provision, which critics have called a "blank cheque" for military adventurism abroad, has been used repeatedly by the US over the past two decades for controversial interventions in countries across Africa, Asia and the Middle East, including Afghanistan, Iraq, Libya, Syria, Ethiopia and Yemen.