International-UN-NGOs | |
The new map that could be guiding Trump's Middle East moves | |
2025-06-21 | |
[FoxNews] President's seemingly contradictory moves align with reviving the stalled India-Middle East-Europe Corridor project President Donald Trump came back into office promising no new wars. So far, he’s kept that promise. But he’s also left much of Washington — and many of America’s allies — confused by a series of rapid, unexpected moves across the Middle East. In just a few months, Trump has reopened backchannels with Iran, then turned around and threatened its regime with collapse. He’s kept Israel at arm’s length — skipping it on his regional tour — before signaling support once again. He lifted U.S. sanctions on Syria’s Islamist leader, a figure long treated as untouchable in Washington. And he made headlines by hosting Pakistan’s top general at the White House, even as India publicly objected. For those watching closely, it’s been hard to pin down a clear doctrine. Critics see improvisation — sometimes even contradiction. But step back, and a pattern begins to emerge. It’s not about ideology, democracy promotion, or traditional alliances. It’s about access. Geography. Trade. More specifically, it may be about restarting a long-stalled infrastructure project meant to bypass China — and put the United States back at the center of a strategic economic corridor stretching from India to Europe. The project is called the India–Middle East–Europe Corridor, or IMEC. Most Americans have never heard of it. It was launched in 2023 at the G20 summit in New Delhi,
IMEC’s vision is bold but simple: Indian goods would travel west via rail and ports through the Gulf, across Israel, and on to European markets. Along the way, the corridor would connect not just trade routes, but energy pipelines, digital cables, and logistics hubs. It would be the first serious alternative to China’s Belt and Road Initiative — a way for the U.S. and its partners to build influence without boots on the ground. But before construction could begin, war broke out in Gaza. The October 2023 Hamas attacks and Israel’s military response sent the region into crisis. Normalization talks between Saudi Arabia and Israel fell apart. The Red Sea became a warzone for shipping. And Gulf capital flows paused. The corridor — and the broader idea of using infrastructure to tie the region together — was quietly shelved. That’s the backdrop for Trump’s current moves. Taken individually, they seem scattered. Taken together, they align with the logic of clearing obstacles to infrastructure. Trump may not be drawing maps in the Situation Room. But his instincts — for leverage, dealmaking and unpredictability — are removing the very roadblocks that halted IMEC in the first place. His approach to Iran is a prime example. In April, backchannels were reopened on the nuclear front. In May, a Yemen truce was brokered — reducing attacks on Gulf shipping. In June, after Israeli strikes inside Iran, Trump escalated rhetorically, calling for Iran’s "unconditional surrender." That combination of engagement and pressure may sound erratic. But it mirrors the approach that cleared a diplomatic path with North Korea: soften the edges, then apply public pressure. Meanwhile, Trump’s temporary distancing from Israel is harder to miss. He skipped it on his regional tour and avoided aligning with Prime Minister Netanyahu’s continued hard-line approach to Gaza. Instead, he praised Qatar — a U.S. military partner and quiet mediator in the Gaza talks — and signaled support for Gulf-led reconstruction plans. The message: if Israel refuses to engage in regional stabilization, it won’t control the map. Trump also made the unexpected decision to lift U.S. sanctions on Syria’s new leader, President Ahmad al-Sharaa — a figure with a past in Islamist groups, now leading a transitional government backed by the UAE. Critics saw the move as legitimizing extremism. But in practice, it unlocked regional financing and access to transit corridors once blocked by U.S. policy. Even the outreach to Pakistan — which angered India — fits a broader infrastructure lens. Pakistan borders Iran, influences Taliban-controlled Afghanistan, and maintains ties with Gulf militaries. Welcoming Pakistan’s military chief was less about loyalty, and more about leverage. In corridor politics, geography often trumps alliances. None of this means Trump has a master plan. There’s no confirmed strategy memo that links these moves to IMEC. And the region remains volatile. Iran’s internal stability is far from guaranteed. The Gaza conflict could reignite. Saudi and Qatari interests don’t always align. But there’s a growing logic underneath the diplomacy: de-escalate just enough conflict to make capital flow again — and make corridors investable. That logic may not be ideologically pure. It certainly isn’t about spreading democracy. But it reflects a real shift in U.S. foreign policy. Call it infrastructure-first geopolitics — where trade routes, ports and pipelines matter more than treaties and summits. To be clear, the United States isn’t the only player thinking this way. China’s Belt and Road Initiative has been advancing the same model for over a decade. Turkey, Iran and Russia are also exploring new logistics and energy corridors. But what sets IMEC apart — and what makes Trump’s recent moves notable — is that it offers an opening for the U.S. to compete without large-scale military deployments or decades-long aid packages. Even the outreach to Pakistan — which angered India — fits a broader infrastructure lens. Pakistan borders Iran, influences Taliban-controlled Afghanistan, and maintains ties with Gulf militaries. For all his unpredictability, Trump has always had a sense for economic leverage. That may be what we’re seeing here: less a doctrine than a direction. Less about grand visions, and more about unlocking chokepoints. There’s no guarantee it will work. The region could turn on a dime. And the corridor could remain, as it is now, a partially built concept waiting on political will. But Trump’s moves suggest he’s trying to build the conditions for it to restart — not by talking about peace, but by making peace a condition for investment. Related: IMEC: 2024-05-27 Obama-supporting male 'artist' with 'she' in bio goes on Boston stabbing spree, 4 girls hospitalized IMEC: 2023-09-21 Hour-long Netanyahu-Biden meeting on UN General Assembly sidelines, appointment to meet at White House before year-end IMEC: 2023-09-12 'Three Seas' summit: they didn’t have time to accept Ukraine, and Zelensky threatens the EU with court | |
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India-Pakistan |
China's $240 Million Airport in Terror-Plagued Pakistan Region Entirely Deserted |
2025-02-27 |
[Breitbart] A newly inaugurated, allegedly state-of-the-art international airport in one of Pakistan’s most restive regions appears to have no significant plane traffic in it since its first arrival in late January, multiple reports revealed this week, and has left locals confused and concerned for what it means about their future. The New Gwadar International Airport is located in Balochistan, home to a separatist terror group and a port that the Chinese Communist Party has identified as critical to its Belt and Road Initiative (BRI). Pakistan is one of the most enthusiastic participants in the BRI, a global debt trap scheme in which China ensnares poor countries into its control using predatory loans, and has its own wing of the BRI named after it: the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC). The government of Pakistan has steadfastly supported the development of CPEC with the exception of the term of former Prime Minister Imran Khan, a radical Islamist populist who dramatically cut the BRI budget in his government, although not without paying lip service to China’s alleged wisdom and development foresight. It has faced tremendous challenges to finance BRI projects and significant security problems, particularly in Gwadar, where the separatist Baloch Liberation Army (BLA) has made Chinese citizens a target. The New Gwadar International Airport is estimated to have cost Pakistan $240 million in Chinese financing to build. Islamabad went ahead with officially opening the airport in October 2024, anyway, and it welcomed its first flight on January 21. The Indian newspaper Hindustan Times reported on Tuesday, expanding on earlier coverage from the Associated Press (AP), that the airport appears to get almost no use, describing it as the home of “ghost terminals” and seemingly no airplanes. “The city continues to struggle with basic infrastructure issues, including unreliable electricity and a shortage of clean water, while the airport’s large capacity seems unnecessary for the area’s small population,” it observed. The AP, visiting Gwadar, found the locals confused about the project at best, and alarmed at their potential displacement or colonization at worst. “An airport with a 400,000 passenger capacity isn’t a priority for the city’s 90,000 people,” the agency observed. “People are on edge; activists claim there are forced disappearances and torture, which the government denies.” Claims that the project created “local” jobs have gone unproven and locals lament that the airport has nothing to do with them. “The port has been around for 20 years and now the international airport has been constructed, but not one person from Gwadar has been employed there … not even as a watchman,” one man, Abdul Ghafoor Hoth of the Balochistan Awami Party, told the AP. The Chinese government promoted the BRI as a way for Pakistan to eradicate terrorist violence, particularly radical Islamic terrorism. In Balochistan, the growing Chinese presence, and accompanying Pakistani military operations, appeared to have inspired a new wave of terrorism against Chinese colonialism. When the U.S. State Department designated the BLA a terrorist organization, it listed several attacks targeting Chinese nationals by the group, including “a suicide attack in August 2018 that targeted Chinese engineers in Balochistan, a November 2018 attack on the Chinese consulate in Karachi, and a May 2019 attack against a luxury hotel in Gwadar, Balochistan.” The BLA continued to attack Chinese targets in subsequent years, including Chinese outposts unrelated to the BRI. In one of the most shocking such attacks, a female suicide bomber identified as Shari Baloch attacked the Confucius Institute at the University of Karachi in April 2022, killing four people, three of them Chinese nationals. The BLA took responsibility for the attack; Confucius Institutes are academic centers the Chinese government uses to spread communist ideology. The opening of the New Gwadar International Airport fell victim to security complications, as well. On October 6, 2024, just as officials had planned to inaugurate the project, terrorists detonated an improvised explosive device in Karachi, in an attack directly targeting a convoy carrying Chinese workers arriving in Pakistan. The bombing killed two Chinese citizens and injured several others. The attack outraged the Chinese government, which blamed the BLA for the attack and demanded Islamabad “conduct a thorough investigation of the attack … severely punish the perpetrators … [and] take practical and effective measures to ensure the safety of Chinese citizens, institutions and projects in Pakistan.” Locals speaking to the AP complained that, in the aftermath of the attack, Gwadar has seen an influx of Pakistani military officials who harass locals in an attempt to prevent further attacks. “The city is a jumble of checkpoints, barbed wire, troops, barricades, and watchtowers,” AP said of Gwadar. “Roads close at any given time, several days a week, to permit the safe passage of Chinese workers and Pakistani VIPs.” “We are asked to prove our identity, who we are, where we have come from,” one local lamented. “We are residents. Those who ask should identify themselves as to who they are.” Pakistan held an inauguration ceremony for the airport “virtually” in October following the convoy bombing. Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif attended the virtual ceremony alongside Chinese Prime Minister Li Qiang and celebrated the airport as “another gift from China.” A month after that ceremony, the Pakistan Express Tribune reported that the Pakistan government had no plan for commercializing the airport to welcome airlines or to develop businesses such as restaurants and other stops within the airport for passengers. Related: Balochistan: 2025-02-19 Militants attack aid convoy in Pakistan, kill two and injure 15 Balochistan: 2025-02-16 Good Morning Balochistan: 2025-02-16 At least 11 killed in roadside bombing in Pakistan's Balochistan — Hodhod Yemen News Agency Related: Belt and Road Initiative: 2025-02-03 Panama Caves to Trump Belt and Road Initiative: 2025-01-31 Bloody Mineral: With Trump's Arrival, Africa is on the Brink of a New War Belt and Road Initiative: 2025-01-26 Davos Discomfort: Globalists Nervous Ahead of West-West War Related: China-Pakistan Economic Corridor: 2024-03-21 Heavily Armed Militants Storm Pakistan's China-Operated Gwadar Port, 7 Dead China-Pakistan Economic Corridor: 2023-10-07 Army chief briefed over 'repatriation of illegal foreigners' during Karachi visit China-Pakistan Economic Corridor: 2021-07-30 Will China get embroiled in the graveyard of empires? |
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Home Front: Politix |
Panama Caves to Trump |
2025-02-03 |
[PJMedia] Secretary of State Marco Rubio met with Panamanian President José Raúl Mulino on Sunday, making it clear that the U.S. won’t tolerate China’s growing influence over the Panama Canal. "Secretary Rubio informed President Mulino and Minister Martínez-Acha that President Trump has made a preliminary determination that the current position of influence and control of the Chinese Communist Party over the Panama Canal area is a threat to the canal and represents a violation of the Treaty Concerning the Permanent Neutrality and Operation of the Panama Canal," the State Department said in a statement. "Secretary Rubio made clear that this status quo is unacceptable and that absent immediate changes, it would require the United States to take measures necessary to protect its rights under the Treaty." The news had barely settled before another bombshell dropped: Panama has backed down. Panamanian President José Raúl Mulino announced that after his meeting Rubio, his government will not renew its 2017 memorandum with China on the "Belt and Road Initiative." He also stated that Panama will seek to terminate its agreements with the Chinese government ahead of their scheduled end dates in 2027 and 2028. "One important thing, which is a decision I made and communicated to you, is that the 2017 MoU on the Silk Road, the Bell and Road Initiative, will not be renewed by my government. That is the case," Mulino said according to a translation of his remarks. "We are going to study the possibility of whether it can be finished earlier or not, but I think it is due for renewal in one or two years, because it is every three years. So that initiative that was signed when it was signed, at the time it was signed, will not be renewed by my government. I think "that this visit opens a path to build a new stage of relations." He continued, "That's how I see it, that's how I felt from Secretary Marco Rubio, and at the same time, we're trying as much as possible to increase U.S. investments in Panama. I explained to him a series of infrastructure projects that the government has in its portfolio, in the hope that they'll be aware of them and that when the time comes, the bidding process that will begin very soon will be done, so that they can get involved." They’re not just refusing to renew their 2017 deal with China; they’re scrambling to cut ties ahead of schedule. China’s influence over the canal is coming to an end. Related: José Raúl Mulino 02/01/2025 Not the First Time. Why the US Is Right to War for the Panama Canal José Raúl Mulino 01/26/2025 Davos Discomfort: Globalists Nervous Ahead of West-West War José Raúl Mulino 01/12/2025 Iran says it is ready to support Greenland in the fight against US aggression |
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Africa Subsaharan |
Bloody Mineral: With Trump's Arrival, Africa is on the Brink of a New War |
2025-01-31 |
Direct Translation via Google Translate. Edited. by Victor Vasiliev [REGNUM] The world has yet to fully assess the global consequences of the change of power in the United States. But it is already obvious that American foreign policy will undergo serious changes. ![]() Such a strategically important direction as Africa is no exception. However, no one expected that changes would begin so quickly and the continent would find itself on the threshold of a new major war. PROFITS OF WESTERN CORPORATIONS The M23 (March 23 Movement) rebel group, which has seized control of much of the eastern Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) in recent years, says it has recaptured the key city of Goma, capital of North Kivu province, which is home to large reserves of rare earth metals, from government forces. In addition to gold, copper, cobalt and diamonds, the Congo has large reserves of coltan, a valuable mineral used to make smartphones, tablets and other devices. Its production is the cause of serious armed conflicts, so it is no coincidence that coltan is called the "bloodiest" mineral. There is little of it on Earth, and the largest electronics manufacturers need more and more raw materials every year. The bulk of coltan is smuggled out of Congo through neighboring Rwanda. The largest processing plants are located on its territory. And it is the Rwandan armed forces and special services that the Congolese side accuses of supporting separatists and direct participation in the armed conflict. Last year, Rwanda signed an agreement with Anglo-Australian mining giant Rio Tinto to explore and develop lithium in the country, an official announcement was made on January 29, 2024. Rio Tinto Group is an Australian-British concern, the third-largest transnational mining and metallurgical company in the world and, incidentally, the main competitor of the Russian company RUSAL. The investment agreement envisages the creation of a joint venture with the Rwandan company Aterian to develop lithium and related products (cesium, tantalum, etc.). Rio Tinto plans to invest $7.5 million, which will allow it to become the owner of 75% of the lithium production, located in the southwest of the country (on the border with the DR Congo) on a site of 2,750 hectares. The investment decision on Rwanda shows Rio Tinto's global strategy to take a significant share of the market for the metal needed for batteries. Experts have long known that Rwanda's rare earth metals processing facilities, located in the west and south of the country, operate on raw materials mined in the neighboring Democratic Republic of Congo. And now, under various pretexts, Kigali is carrying out aggression against its neighboring state, destabilizing the situation in the entire region, provoking a humanitarian crisis, and all this for the sake of profits for Western corporations such as Rio Tinto. With Donald Trump in power in the White House, Rwanda has decided to build on its success. Which will likely result in another major bloodbath in Africa. CHANGE IN US POLICY TOWARDS AFRICA For the national interests of the United States, the geopolitical and geo-economic importance of Africa has increased significantly in recent years. And President Trump, who has repeatedly demonstrated a willingness to question conventional wisdom, including his own past judgments, is likely to pay significant attention to the African Continent, despite his previous statements about wanting to focus on domestic issues and his cool attitude toward Africa during his first term in 2017–21. It is important to clarify that this does not refer to the place that Africa will occupy among the foreign policy priorities of the new administration, and, accordingly, not to the volumes of funds allocated. There will be a change in approach and a reorientation of attention to African countries other than those on which the Biden administration was counting. For example, the well-known US Agency for International Development (USAID), which is often considered responsible for implementing the US “soft power” and “supporting democracy,” is likely to face significant budget cuts. The agency is plagued by accusations of meddling in the affairs of other countries. Many humanitarian programs will be cut, not only in the area of human rights protection, but also in practical areas - in agriculture, health care, etc. And this will hit individual African countries and vulnerable groups hard. Without a doubt, entire layers of African societies, made up of activists and humanitarian workers who use the corresponding budgets, will be left not only without work, but literally without food. THE LOGIC OF CONFRONTATION WITH CHINA On the other hand, the largest infrastructure project implemented by the United States in Africa, the Lobito transport corridor, will be supported and continued. Construction of the railway within the corridor is planned to begin in 2026. 830 kilometers of track should connect Lucano in Angola with Chingola in Zambia. The project envisages extending the railway to the enterprises of the Zambian copper belt. The work is estimated at 2.3 billion dollars. Some experts call the "Lobito Corridor" the "Trump Corridor" because the idea appeared back in 2020 during the first presidential term of the "strongest American leader", and the project equally includes both commercial interests and geopolitical logic. That is, American policy will become less ideological, more practical and at the same time subordinate to this logic. We are talking about confrontation with China and the definition of Beijing as the geopolitical "enemy number one", which became a certain consensus of the American elite during Trump's first term in office. And if we reason in the logic of opposition to the Celestial Empire, then Africa could become the key space for confrontation between the two powers. As strange as it may sound, the key link in China's strategy is not Taiwan, not the bordering Central Asia or the countries of Southeast Asia, but Africa. Simply because of the presence of a huge number of minerals, including those critically important for modern sectors of the economy, in the extraction of some of which China already has a monopoly. Also, due to objective factors - economic and population growth - in a number of African countries, China has seriously increased its imports in recent years. Africa is also a promising market, which is forgotten by the same Western mining companies. If you look at China's most famous initiative, "One Belt, One Road", it turns out that it was African countries that received the most funding. In the energy sector alone, China has financed more than 36 projects (mostly hydroelectric and solar power plants) in at least 19 African countries. In addition, between 2021 and 2023, Beijing signed 66 project contracts with African governments, 57 of which were in sub-Saharan Africa, and only two contracts were signed outside the Belt and Road Initiative. As a result, Africa will remain a primary focus of American foreign policy, along with the Middle East, where Israel has strong interests, and Southeast Asia, where US attention is focused on Taiwan, but not only. SANCTIONS AND ISRAEL'S INTERESTS The Republicans' toolkit for combating China's growing influence includes not only positive cases (like the "Lobito corridor"), but also negative ones. We are talking about sanctions that will be widely applied to African elites who allowed themselves to choose the "wrong partner." Apart from China, where everything is pretty clear, many forget that the Republicans are almost completely in solidarity with Israel's foreign policy. The latest events in the Middle East are indicative in this regard. But this also applies to the African direction. Under Trump, South Africa and a number of other African countries that allowed themselves to be too harsh in their criticism of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu during the latest crisis in the Gaza Strip will find themselves in the crosshairs of American sanctions and other forms of pressure from Washington. At the same time, the United States will pay special attention to countries that have come under significant Israeli influence in recent years: Morocco, Ethiopia, Chad, Sudan, Kenya, Rwanda, Uganda. It is worth remembering that it was the Republicans who initially began to effectively use such an instrument as sanctions in international politics – this is a fact. Just Security, an information resource at New York University School of Law and considered a source close to the White House administration, predicts that the Trump administration will widely use sanctions against Africa. The author of the article, Brad Brooks-Rubin, a senior adviser at the US State Department’s Office of Sanctions Coordination, reports that the Trump administration, unlike Biden, will be able to use this system of pressure more successfully: “This could open up new opportunities to advance broader policy, national security and even economic goals, such as competition with China, supply chain security for critical minerals and other natural resources, and even immigration.” As successful cases, the author cites the Trump administration's sanctions measures from 2017 to 2020 against the Democratic Republic of the Congo (which prevented Joseph Kabila from retaining power ) and against South Sudan (which helped end the civil war). Overall, however, the idea that the Trump administration will be able to more effectively deal with the consequences of the huge array of sanctions that the Democrats have created against Russia and China is highly questionable. OPPORTUNITIES FOR RUSSIA The strategy of confronting China and defending Israel's interests can also be supplemented by the Republicans' dislike of traditional Western partners. To the point that in a number of areas, the Trump administration may prefer Russia to France as a partner in Africa (we are talking, of course, about the Sahel). For example, Republicans cannot stand French President Emmanuel Macron. Phenomenally, but it is a fact: France’s recent defeats in Africa, including the forced and humiliating withdrawal of French troops from Chad, have caused Republicans to feel a sense of restrained satisfaction. On the other hand, sanctions restrictions on a number of African countries (the "stick method") from the White House will once again push these countries towards Russia. It should not be forgotten that Russia and African countries have similar experience in resisting Western sanctions. Some African countries have been under sanctions pressure for a very long time: Sudan since 1993, Zimbabwe since 2003. And this is another circumstance that brings us closer together. Such experience also provides an opportunity to implement a system of counter-sanction measures. Starting with interaction and coordination of a common position at the level of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and international platforms and ending with the implementation of specific economic steps. The first action could be to study the mechanisms for implementing Western sanctions and the practices of their application against African countries, as well as a comparison with the current Russian experience. Africa is literally the storehouse of the collective West. Without access to African resources, all scientific and technical progress of the Western world loses its base, and the Chinese end up as winners. And in this sense, the position of African countries, which have largely refused to follow the Western propaganda, is very indicative. Recall that 26 African countries did not support the resolution calling for an end to Russia's military operations in Ukraine. Eritrea voted against the resolution and expressed clear support for Moscow, 16 other African countries abstained, and nine countries did not take part in the vote. Russia has no need to show solidarity with the interests of China or the United States on the African continent. Its goal is different: to consolidate and expand its own influence in the conditions of confrontation between these two powers, in particular to fully settle accounts with its long-standing opponent, France. Returning to the situation in the Democratic Republic of Congo, it can be noted that at the grassroots level in Congolese society there are numerous calls for the need to invite Russia and Russian instructors to ensure security in the eastern provinces of the country. These calls are indicative from the point of view of the possible growth of not only the relations between our countries, but also the popularity of Russia on the Black Continent as a whole. We can equally act as independent arbitrators and as defenders of all those unfairly offended and disadvantaged on the continent. |
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International-UN-NGOs |
Davos Discomfort: Globalists Nervous Ahead of West-West War |
2025-01-26 |
Direct Translation via Google Translate. Edited. by Leonid Savin [REGNUM] This past week, heads of government, banks, large corporations, as well as economists and other supporters of the program that the founder of the World Economic Forum (WEF) Klaus Schwab calls the “fourth industrial revolution” or “reset” gathered once again in Davos, Switzerland. ![]() The WEF is also well known for working with celebrities and public figures to help advance its agenda. This time, former Spice Girl Melanie Brown was featured in Davos as a victim of domestic violence. The speeches of many participants were a rather strange cocktail of ideas of globalism, capitalism, technological development and neoliberalism, seasoned with "democratic" rhetoric. There is no point in dwelling on all the speeches in detail; it is worth highlighting only the most striking details. THE BEGINNING CONFRONTATION Compared to previous forums, there was a certain nervousness in the air, caused, above all, by the return to the White House of Donald Trump, who has effectively declared war on globalism, and therefore on the agenda that the Davos Forum is promoting. Ahead of the meeting, various economists and bankers called 2025 a difficult year that could change. And that is absolutely true: under Trump, the EU will come under greater pressure. In his Davos speech, he accused European Union regulators of targeting Apple, Meta* and Google, calling the lawsuits against US companies a "form of taxation." The US president specifically cited a €13 billion court case that Apple lost last year. The EU court in Luxembourg upheld a landmark 2016 ruling that Ireland had violated state aid laws by giving Apple an unfair advantage. And the money, which had been sitting in an escrow account until the final ruling, should be returned. Given that virtually all major US tech companies support Trump (and he, accordingly, them), the White House is clearly intent on pushing the interests of these giant corporations in the EU. In general, with the new course of US foreign policy, the globalists gathering at the WEF are unlikely to feel comfortable. Secret depravity of the Davos global elite Especially considering that there is a clear division in the EU between supporters and opponents of Trump. There is, for example, Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni, who will certainly be listening closely to signals from Washington. On the other hand, there are the heads of Germany and France, who are still having problems with the electorate. And, of course, the most striking example of the emerging confrontation with the US is Britain, which is closely linked to the EU. Its Prime Minister Keir Starmer, with the easy help of billionaire and one of the key members of Trump's team Elon Musk, has already received the nickname "Pakistan rapist". GLOBALIZATION IN CHINESE The second noteworthy moment of the forum was the speeches by representatives of China. In a special address, Vice Premier of the State Council of the People's Republic of China Ding Xuexiang called on governments to support multilateral institutions and warned against the ever-wider use of protectionist policies. "We must jointly uphold and practice genuine multilateralism. Multilateralism is the right way to maintain world peace and promote human progress. It is the golden key to solving the difficulties and challenges facing the world," he said. Earlier, the US administration of Barack Obama, including Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, advocated for the aforementioned “multilateralism”. Why is China now talking about it? To some extent, this country is trying to replace the globalization under the auspices of the United States with its own globalization. Of course, it differs from the American one in a number of parameters, but still, from the point of view of national economies, it is the same globalization. Under it, goods and services are displaced by Chinese ones, and the expansion of international infrastructure (the Belt and Road Initiative) serves the long-term interests of China itself, helping to saturate other countries with its goods. It is just done more gently, without the overt pressure or coercion previously practiced by Western transnational corporations. FIGHTING "OPPONENTS OF DEMOCRACY" As for the notable speeches of other state leaders, commenting on the US desire to have greater control over the Panama Canal, Panamanian President José Raúl Mulino once again stated that the canal belongs to his country and called for respect for international agreements. He also emphasized the strength of Panama's alliance with the US. Trump uses his menacing rhetoric and pressure as a “booster” in further negotiations, including to strengthen the US position in Central America as a whole. In reality, a military intervention to establish control over the canal, which Panama fears, is unlikely. And the American president's harsh attacks are explained by the presence of infrastructure in the canal area, operated by China. Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez also spoke at the forum, calling on the EU to help “make social media great again” (to borrow Trump’s slogan) by cracking down on tech platforms he says are run by lawless tycoons. “Tech billionaires want to overthrow democracy. This is the truth about the terrible threat we face,” Sanchez said, citing the spread of “disinformation” that fuels anti-liberal political movements. “The technology that was supposed to liberate us has become an instrument of our own oppression,” the Spanish prime minister said. The truth is that with the advent of Trump, social media began a sharp turn away from the liberal globalist agenda, although they had previously followed it and introduced strict censorship towards any opponents and critics of it. But now that the liberals’ criticism has “suddenly” become in demand, they immediately began to be indignant, explaining the new rhetoric as the machinations of “opponents of democracy.” Volodymyr Zelensky also attended the forum, but he did not distinguish himself with any innovations. He was concerned that the US and Russia could reach an agreement on Ukraine, so he called on the EU to unite and continue to provide assistance to Kiev. In his opinion, Europe is interested in strengthening and repelling the “Russian threat”. His call for NATO countries to increase their defense spending to 5% of GDP surprisingly coincided with Donald Trump's demands. Although Zelensky has his own interest here - receiving further military-technical assistance. However, it is unclear how European countries can stabilize their economies without cheap Russian gas in order to increase military spending. The EU leadership has confirmed that energy resources will become even more expensive. Therefore, increased spending, which continues to destroy the European economy, is inevitable. Therefore, statements about the EU investment plan, which supposedly will ensure a technological breakthrough, support the “green” agenda, and strengthen collective defense, do not look very convincing. Overall, the Davos forum leaves a strong impression that both it and the globalists' program as a whole, despite their connections and influence, continue to crack. And the most significant contribution to this is now being made by the main player in the Western world - the United States. Related: World Economic Forum: 2025-01-25 Davos elite nod along as Trump delivers ultimatum World Economic Forum: 2025-01-25 The anti-woke speech that rocked Davos: Argentina's President Milei slams 'deeply wrong' gender and migration ideology - and says UK 'imprisons citizens for revealing crimes committed by Muslim migrants' World Economic Forum: 2025-01-24 How Donald Trump could make Greenland an offer they can''t refuse |
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Caribbean-Latin America |
China megaport paves way into Latin America as wary US looks on |
2024-11-16 |
[BBC] As the world waits to see how the return of Donald Trump will reshape relations between Washington and Beijing, China has just taken decisive action to entrench its position in Latin America. Trump won the US presidential election on a platform that promised tariffs as high as 60% on Chinese-made goods. Further south, though, a new China-backed megaport has the potential to create whole new trade routes that will bypass North America entirely. President Xi Jinping himself attended the inauguration of the Chancay port on the Peruvian coast this week, an indication of just how seriously China takes the development. Xi was in Peru for the annual meeting of the Asia-Pacific Economic Co-operation Forum (Apec). But all eyes were on Chancay and what it says about China's growing assertiveness in a region that the US has traditionally seen as its sphere of influence. As seasoned observers see it, Washington is now paying the price for years of indifference towards its neighbours and their needs. "The US has been absent from Latin America for so long, and China has moved in so rapidly, that things have really reconfigured in the past decade," says Monica de Bolle, senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics in Washington. "You have got the backyard of America engaging directly with China," she tells the BBC. "That's going to be problematic." Even before it opened, the $3.5bn (£2.75bn) project, masterminded by China's state-owned Cosco Shipping, had already turned a once-sleepy Peruvian fishing town into a logistical powerhouse set to transform the country's economy. China's official Communist Party newspaper, the People's Daily, called it "a vindication of China-Peru win-win co-operation". Peru's President Dina Boluarte was similarly enthusiastic, describing the megaport as a "nerve centre" that would provide "a point of connection to access the gigantic Asian market". But the implications go far beyond the fortunes of one small Andean nation. Once Chancay is fully up and running, goods from Chile, Ecuador, Colombia and even Brazil are expected to pass through it on their way to Shanghai and other Asian ports. China already has considerable appetite for the region's exports, including Brazilian soybeans and Chilean copper. Now this new port will be able to handle larger ships, as well as cutting shipping times from 35 to 23 days. However, the new port will favour imports as well as exports. As signs grow that an influx of cheap Chinese goods bought online may be undermining domestic industry, Chile and Brazil have scrapped tax exemptions for individual customers on low-value foreign purchases. As nervous US military hawks have pointed out, if Chancay can accommodate ultra-large container vessels, it can also handle Chinese warships. The most strident warnings have come from Gen Laura Richardson, who has just retired as chief of US Southern Command, which covers Latin America and the Caribbean. She has accused China of "playing the ‘long game’ with its development of dual-use sites and facilities throughout the region", adding that those sites could serve as "points of future multi-domain access for the [People's Liberation Army] and strategic naval chokepoints". Even if that prospect never materialises, there is a strong perception that the US is losing ground in Latin America as China forges ahead with its Belt and Road Initiative (BRI). Outgoing US President Joe Biden was among the leaders at the Apec summit, on his first and last visit to South America during his four-year term. Media commentators remarked that he cut a diminished figure next to China's Xi. Prof Álvaro Méndez, director of the Global South Unit at the London School of Economics, points out that while the US was taking Latin America for granted, Xi was visiting the region regularly and cultivating good relations. "The bar has been set so low by the US that China only has to be a little bit better to get through the door," he says. Of course, Latin America is not the only part of the world targeted by the BRI. Since 2023, China's unprecedented infrastructure splurge has pumped money into nearly 150 countries worldwide. The results have not always been beneficial, with many projects left unfinished, while many developing countries that signed up for Beijing's largesse have found themselves burdened with debt as a result. Even so, left-wing and right-wing governments alike have cast aside their initial suspicions of China, because "their interests are aligned" with those of Beijing, says the Peterson Institute's Ms de Bolle: "They have lowered their guard out of sheer necessity." |
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India-Pakistan |
Dozens killed in south-west Pakistan after suicide bomb attack |
2024-11-10 |
[EuroNews] A day with a "y" in Pakistain A suicide bomber blew himself up at a train station in troubled Baluchistan province on Saturday, killing at least 26 people, officials said. A suicide bomber blew himself up at a train station in troubled southwestern Pakistan on Saturday, killing at least 26 people, including soldiers and railway staff, and wounding about 62 others, some critically, officials said. The attack happened when nearly 100 passengers were waiting for a train to travel to the garrison city of Rawalpindi from Quetta, the capital of Baluchistan province, according to Hamza Shafqaat, a senior government administrator. When asked about a security breach that led to the bombing, Shafqaat told reporters that "it is usually very difficult to stop such suicide attacks." However, Shahid Nawaz, who is in charge of security at Quetta’s train station, insisted there was no breach as the attacker was disguised as a passenger and blew himself up among people at the station. TV footage showed the steel structure of the platform’s roof blown apart and a destroyed tea stall. Luggage was strewn everywhere. Most of the victims were taken to a state-owned hospital and some to a military one. Wasim Baig, a spokesman for the health department and police said over a dozen soldiers and six railway employees were among the dead at the station, where a walk-through gate has been installed to check whether anyone is carrying explosives. Still, there are multiple other entrances to the station without such security. A separatist group, the Baluchistan Liberation Army, claimed the attack in a statement, saying a suicide bomber targeted troops present at the railway station. The outlawed BLA has long waged an insurgency seeking independence from Islamabad. A senior superintendent of police operations, Muhammad Baloch, said separatists frequently attacked soft targets. "When their people are arrested, they also attack in retaliation. We all have to fight this war. We are resilient. Our teams are here and trying to save as many lives as we can." Police said some of the critically wounded passengers had died in the hospital, raising the death toll. Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif denounced the bombing in a statement, saying those who orchestrated the attack "will pay a very heavy price for it," adding that security forces were determined to eliminate "the menace of terrorism." Saturday's assault came a little over a week after a powerful bomb attached to a motorcycle exploded near a vehicle carrying police officers assigned to protect polio workers in the province, killing nine people, including five children who were nearby. In August, the BLA carried out multiple coordinated attacks on passengers buses, police and security forces across Baluchistan, killing more than 50 people, mostly civilians. Oil- and mineral-rich Baluchistan is Pakistan’s largest but also least populated province. It is a hub for the country’s ethnic Baloch minority whose members say they face discrimination and exploitation by the central government. Along with separatist groups, Islamic militants also operate in the province. The BLA mostly targets security forces and foreigners, especially Chinese nationals who are in Pakistan as part of Beijing’s multibillion-dollar Belt and Road Initiative, which is working on major infrastructure projects. The group often demands the halt of all Chinese-funded projects and for workers to leave Pakistan to avoid further attacks. Last month, the BLA claimed responsibility for a suicide bombing that targeted a convoy with Chinese nationals outside Karachi airport, killing two. Beijing has asked Pakistan to ensure the safety of its citizens working in Baluchistan and other parts of the country. |
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China-Japan-Koreas |
What China's New African Strategy Will Mean for Russia and the US |
2024-09-20 |
Direct Translation via Google Translate. Edited. by Victor Vasiliev [REGNUM] The Forum on China-Africa Cooperation (FOCAC), which took place in Beijing in early September, caused a wave of inspiration in African countries and criticism in Western media, which has not subsided to this day. In Russia, opinions were divided regarding this significant event for the Black Continent. ![]() On the one hand, China is our strategic ally in the context of global confrontation with the West. On the other hand, real achievements and growth points of the Chinese presence in African countries are often realized through direct competition with Russia. Of course, China is an ally of Russia in a number of international organizations – BRICS, SCO, and also acts as our permanent ally on most controversial issues in the UN Security Council. Beijing and Moscow have reached a significant understanding in a number of joint and border zones of influence, primarily in Central Asia, partly in the South Caucasus and Eastern Europe. There is even talk of mutual complementarity of the two states' strategies in these regions. This would have been unimaginable three years ago. It would be natural to assume that in other areas, relations between China and Russia remain just as friendly and mutually interested. And in this sense, China's strategy in Africa unpleasantly surprises Russia. Not only does China not need anyone's help or coordination of efforts on the Black Continent, but it is also ready to take into account only its own interests. Including achieving new successes in cooperation with African countries, becoming our direct competitor in certain areas. In particular, this is how things stand in the area of arms sales. THREE REASONS TO CHOOSE CHINESE WEAPONS China has become the largest arms supplier to sub-Saharan Africa, surpassing Russia for the first time. Russian arms sales fell by 44% between 2019 and 2023, while China is increasing its presence. In effect, China is looking for new markets where Russia is weakening. The fact is that both Russian and Chinese weapons are in approximately the same price segment with a generally similar range. Yes, the quality and reliability of Russian weapons is still higher, but China takes it in a different way. Firstly, Beijing has the potential for significant dumping. Secondly, Chinese manufacturers offer interesting purchasing mechanisms (loans for the purchase of weapons), related services for equipment maintenance and training of armed forces. That is, we are not talking about just selling weapons, but about a whole package deal, the terms of which are quite advantageous for the African side. Third, and just as important, Beijing often uses military contracts as a nice bonus for major investment and trade deals with African countries. Thus, China is realizing its primary interest in Africa - increasing its influence, and in the medium term it may sacrifice its own earnings. One of the factors complicating Russia's competition is the sanctions pressure from Western countries, which is having a painful impact on the prospects of the Russian military-industrial complex. This, in particular, is something our traditional partner Egypt is very concerned about. In general, the Celestial Empire is doing excellently in Africa on its own; it does not need Russia as an ally. Even in the most successful area for us, the security sector, China gives preference exclusively to its own private security structures and PMCs. Moreover, it was in Africa that China built its first military base abroad in 2017. We are talking about the logistics base for the Chinese People's Liberation Army (PLA) Navy in the small but strategically important for the entire East African coast African state of Djibouti. In any other areas - from the extraction of natural resources to the construction of nuclear power plants - Russia in Africa is of no interest to China as an ally or a side complementing its strategy. Quite the contrary. China has been implementing its own African strategy for decades. It called itself the leader of the third world, meaning Africa, back in the days of Mao Zedong, competing with the USSR in the 1970s. And, unlike the latter, it has never left the Black Continent. Therefore, from the Chinese point of view, it is not they who have come to our potential territory, but we who have come to their fiefdom. Another thing is that there will be no open confrontation between our countries anywhere in the near future. FOSSIL CONTROL In 2023, according to the International Trade Center (ITC), China's trade turnover with African countries amounted to $283 billion (it has grown more than 20-fold since 2000). China is Africa's second-largest trading partner after the European Union. In 2009, it surpassed the United States in this indicator. More than 10,000 Chinese companies and enterprises operate on the continent. China mainly imports minerals from Africa, and this is the key point. It turns out that for the entire ten years since the announcement of the Belt and Road Initiative, China has been rapidly and at the same time painstakingly moving towards its goal - establishing control over some strategically important minerals and stable and safe logistics from Africa to Asia for their further processing in China. The proposal to merge the Silk Road Economic Belt and the 21st Century Maritime Silk Road projects was first put forward by Chinese President Xi Jinping during his visits to Kazakhstan and Indonesia in the fall of 2013. However, this initiative was most successfully implemented in Africa, which is relatively far away from China. 44 African countries were involved in this initiative, receiving large infrastructure projects implemented on their territory. Chinese-African cooperation with the launch of the “One Belt, One Road” initiative in 2013, according to China Daily, led to the construction of 6,000 km of railways, 6,000 km of highways and 20 ports in Africa. At first glance, the situation is paradoxical: China’s priorities in foreign economic activity are not in the border countries of Central Asia or Southeast Asia, but in Africa. The goal-setting becomes clearer if we analyze the structure of the current economic confrontation between Beijing and Washington, in which Chinese companies are currently winning. And this is happening due to the presence of indisputable advantages in the form of control and access to the raw materials base in Africa. THE AMERICANS ARE TRYING TO FIGHT BACK For example, the struggle between the US and China in such a key area as the electric car market is based on access to metals mined in Africa. Leading American expert on this continent Peter Pham shares an interesting analysis of the current confrontation between the US and China on the pages of the conservative international relations magazine The National Interest. Due to the commitments made by Western countries to limit their impact on the environment, the production and operation of electric vehicles is acquiring strategic importance. The Biden administration has used formal and informal measures to regulate the auto market to ensure that two-thirds of cars and trucks sold in the United States, the world's largest market, will be electric or hybrid by 2032. However, the artificial increase in demand for electric cars primarily had a beneficial effect on the Chinese auto industry. It turned out that the Chinese hybrid Yuan Plus is several times cheaper than its analogues from the American manufacturer Ford. Faced with such a problem, the State Department took an unprecedented step on May 14, 2024: it raised the tariff rate on foreign-made electric vehicles from 25% to 100% (a classic example of trade wars and protectionism). However, this did not help: China still retains its dominance. American and European electric vehicle manufacturers are almost entirely dependent on supplies of batteries used in new cars, as well as the materials and metals used to create the low-carbon energy systems so essential to a “green economy.” The International Energy Agency estimates that the net-zero emissions target by 2050, set out in the European Union's climate law and President Joe Biden's December 2021 executive order, will increase demand for lithium, graphite, cobalt and nickel by a factor of thirty over the next twenty years. Here again, much depends on Africa. The Dark Continent contains about a third of the world's mineral resources, including more than half of the world's cobalt, manganese and platinum. Only China has reliable access to supplies of the necessary strategic materials. Beijing has achieved this through years of investment in African mining and supply chains. Today, China produces enough batteries to supply all EV manufacturers in the world. In fact, one Chinese firm, CATL, controls more than 30% of the global EV battery market and has been the leading manufacturer for seven years in a row. For example, the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) accounts for just under three-quarters of all cobalt produced in the world. And almost all of the metal is then exported to China, which processes about 90% of the world's cobalt and rare earth element production, concentrating in its hands 50-70% of lithium supplies and 35% of nickel supplies. It must be acknowledged that the Biden administration is aware of the scale of the problems and the corresponding adjustment of the US strategy in Africa is already taking place. In particular, the Lobito Corridor project, which is already being implemented and connects Angola, the DRC and Zambia, is a major geopolitical and infrastructure project to get rid of direct dependence on Beijing. The corridor will provide a shorter and more reliable transport route from the mineral-rich inland countries to the Angolan port of the same name on the Atlantic Ocean via a new railway. WEST AFRICA In recent years, Beijing has been making some adjustments to its African strategy. Having abandoned support for risky projects and the distribution of loans, it is focusing on cooperation in key areas for itself, trying to secure the support of the largest players on the continent. This primarily concerns Nigeria, South Africa and Ethiopia, with which the Chinese side has the most impressive indicators of trade and economic turnover, and whose economies are the largest in the African subregions. It is pro-American Nigeria that today strives not only for economic but also political leadership in the regional association ECOWAS (Economic Community of West African States). Our main geopolitical project on the Black Continent, the Sahel Alliance, which has announced its complete withdrawal from ECOWAS structures, is the main obstacle to the implementation of this plan. It is logical to assume that Nigeria, which is China's key partner in the region, may ask Beijing to put pressure on Russia in West Africa. There is reason to say that the Sahel Alliance (which includes Mali, Burkina Faso and Niger) may face tacit opposition from China. The fact that in this case the interests of the pro-American regime and China may coincide should not be disconcerting. We can see something similar in Kenya, where China is implementing large infrastructure projects, while the country's political leadership remains pro-American. The whole point is that the struggle on the African continent is not two- or even three-sided. It is a multi-sided game, with a large number of countries and factors. Therefore, the most unexpected temporary combinations and alliances are possible here. According to African observers, Nigerian leader Bola Tinubu's participation in the Beijing summit of the Forum on China-Africa Cooperation (FOCAC) can be considered the clearest indicator of the success of China's strategy, even though as many as 54 African delegations attended the summit. Even a brief list of the results of the talks between Tinubu and Xi is impressive. In particular, Nigeria is ready to strengthen partnership in the development of energy and mineral resources and to build factories together with Chinese companies both to meet local needs and for export, says Nigerian Foreign Minister Yusuf Tuggar. The two sides also decided to make joint efforts to build on Nigeria's geographical and economic advantage in West Africa to establish the continent's flagship projects for inter-ethnic and inter-regional cooperation. China commended Nigeria's leading role in ECOWAS and its efforts to ensure stability in the region. Nigeria has long been laying claim to clear leadership in West Africa. For a long time, the language barrier with the rest of the Francophone part of the region and the active policy of Paris prevented the local elites and the US standing behind them from realizing these ambitions. In fact, it is precisely these motives that explain Abujdi's very restrained reaction to the militaristic rhetoric of Côte d'Ivoire towards the new authorities of Niger. De facto, it was Nigeria's position that nullified the real attempts of the French side to restore the status quo in Niamey by military means in the summer and autumn of last year. Having achieved recognition of its regional ambitions from Beijing and, as a result, pressure on Russia’s position, Nigeria has every chance of becoming not only an economic but also a political leader in ECOWAS. This can only be realized if the "Sahel Alliance" countries return to this community. Simply under new conditions and without obvious tutelage from Paris. But without a serious role for Russia in the region, of course. And such political consequences of the alliance between the “Chinese dragon” and the regional leader in West Africa are much more important to us than the “pure” economy. |
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India-Pakistan |
Plagued with delays, CPEC reaches nowhere in 10 years |
2024-09-05 |
So much for China replacing America as world hegemon, in accordance with prophecy. [KhaamaPress] The China-Pakistain Economic Corridor (CPEC) was launched close to 10 years ago, but it is struggling to meet its envisaged expectations. The CPEC is a crucial part of the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI), but many of its components have been marred by slow implementation, making them infeasible and unviable. Several thermal power, hydroelectric, transport infrastructure, and special economic zone projects have not become operational yet. The CPEC fiasco was acknowledged by Pak Planning Minister Ahsan Iqbal recently. He did not just accept that the CPEC had lost steam but also said that the progress had regressed by at least 10 years.[1] While Islamabad has its own concerns, the Chinese have blamed Pakistain for the delays in CPEC project construction. "Chinese ambassador has complained to me that you have destroyed CPEC and no work was done in the past three years," Saleem Mandviwalla, Deputy Chairman of the Senate of Pakistain, said earlier.[2] Although the CPEC projects looked ambitious, there were problems with implementation due to misgovernance and improper policies, said Pakistain’s former foreign secretary, Aizaz Ahmad Chaudhry. "Signing MoUs does not automatically translate into projects. For that, we need to create a congenial business environment with minimal red tape and fast-track facilitation. Security of foreign investors and investments has emerged as a serious issue," he said.[3] It is not just delays but the CPEC is going to be detrimental for Pakistain as the megaproject can witness delays for another ten years, said Osama Ahmad, a researcher at the Islamabad-based Pak Institute of Peace Studies. "Now, a decade after CPEC was first launched, the initiative has landed in uncharted territory, delivering very little and attracting myriad controversies. Not only have Pakistain’s development projects stalled over the past decade, but CPEC has also exacerbated longstanding tensions in Pakistain’s Balochistan ...the Pak province bordering Kandahar and Uruzgun provinces in Afghanistan and Sistan Baluchistan in Iran. Its native Baloch propulation is being displaced by Pashtuns and Punjabis and they aren't happy about it... province," he said. Some areas regarding the CPEC implementation have become concerning. Tardy decision-making, Pak leaders’ propensity to speak more and perform less, political instability, dynastic politics, domination of the military, and rising debts are among them. Imtiaz Gul, author and head of the Islamabad-based Centre for Research and Security Studies, said "Ten years on, many Chinese expectations associated with CPEC have gone sour — a journey of lofty rhetoric and shallow promises by Pak leaders and less inclination to implementation and reform required for desired economic progress." China and Pakistain have held regular meetings to keep the CPEC on track. However, it's easy to be generous with someone else's money... it failed to produce the intended benefits. Social scientist Dr Muhammad Ali Sheikh highlighted how lack of transparency, unsustainable imports and Chinese dumping, and political indecision obstructed the implementation of the CPEC projects. "These developments considerably slowed down the implementation and expansion of the programme. One decade on since it was announced, the weaknesses in its implementation should also be addressed," said Sheikh, who is a former vice-chancellor of Bloody Karachi ...formerly the capital of Pakistain, now merely its most important port and financial center. It is among the largest cities in the world, with a population of 18 million, most of whom hate each other and many of whom are armed and dangerous... -based Sindh Madressatul Islam University.[4] Ex-Prime Minister Imran Khan ![]() The Great Khan, who ain't the sharpest bulb on the national tree... was said to have put the CPEC on the backburner owing to political differences and allegations of the megaproject being too favourable to China and disadvantageous to Pakistain.[5] Now the poor pace of the CPEC has created problems for Pakistain amid high inflation rates, trade deficits and massive debt, which are exacerbated by the Covid pandemic and unprecedented floods. The CPEC-driven prosperity, employment opportunities, and poverty reduction remain a distant dream for Paks.[6] Despite the first phase of the CPEC failing to achieve its objective, the Pakistain government is talking about the launch of another new phase of the programme. However, it's easy to be generous with someone else's money... there seems no possibility of it since for China, CPEC is solely establishing connectivity between Xinjiang and Gwadar, which serves its geopolitical interests in the Middle East, said economy journalist Khurram Husain. "No such thing is about to happen, and all the noise around a revival of the China-Pakistain Economic Corridor (CPEC) is either wishful thinking (at best) or a way to camouflage what really is going on," he wrote.[7] Related: China-Pakistain Economic Corridor: 2024-04-18 Security forces kill seven terrorists trying to infiltrate Pak-Afghan border in North Waziristan China-Pakistain Economic Corridor: 2023-08-22 China Turns to Taliban to Control ETIM: Exclusive on Bid to Woo Guv of Afghanistan’s Badakshan China-Pakistain Economic Corridor: 2023-05-20 Can the Belt and Road Initiative Succeed in Afghanistan? |
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Fifth Column |
Ford Foundation funding Moslem radicals |
2024-06-11 |
Chants of "from the river to the sea, Palestine will be free" echo through the streets, along with: "There is only one solution: intifada revolution." Among the crowd is the infamous Palestinian American activist Linda Sarsour, who warns through a megaphone that a cabal of wily Jews has conspired to place "their little posters" (of kidnapped Israeli civilians) across the city, seeking to entice people to rip them down. While many onlookers might look like "ordinary people," she says, the Jews have "their little people all around the city," surveilling others. Sarsour is there to deliver such rhetoric in part because she’s been paid to be there. Her nonprofit, MPower Change, has received $300,000 in grant funding from the Ford Foundation "to build grassroots Muslim power." It’s May 2023, and protesters have stormed the Capitol building in Washington, DC, to demand that lawmakers not accept spending cuts during negotiations to lift the debt ceiling. Many are so disruptive that the police arrest them and drag them out. These are activists of the Center for Popular Democracy, an extreme left-wing organization that has collected $35.2 million from the Ford Foundation since 2012. Four months later they will be imitated by 150 youth activists from “climate revolution” group the Sunrise Movement, 18 of whom will be arrested after occupying the speaker of the House’s office. The Sunrise Movement also receives Ford Foundation money — $650,000 for “training and organizing.” NO CAUSE OFF-LIMITS It’s April 2023, and, a world away, the China Development Research Foundation (CDRF), a think tank set up and directed by the Chinese state, is hosting a conference in Beijing to discuss how to “promote the formation of an internationally accepted ESG system with Chinese characteristics,” including through China’s globe-spanning influence and infrastructure plan, the Belt and Road Initiative. But this effort by America’s top geopolitical adversary isn’t too far afield for the Ford Foundation to fund; it has given CDRF $600,000 to help realize its ambitions. These examples from just the past year — collected via a semi-random tour of the Ford Foundation’s vast Grants Database — represent a tiny fraction of the nearly $1 billion that the foundation gives away yearly on average. Almost a century old and sitting on a mountainous $16.4 billion endowment in 2022, the foundation is a “philanthropic” giant — one of the five largest in the US If it were a for-profit firm, its market capitalization would rank it among the Fortune 500. Instead, “guided by a vision of social justice,” as its mission statement puts it, the Ford Foundation’s enormous flood of untaxed money flows annually to an immense ecosystem of overwhelmingly left-wing — and often outright revolutionary — causes. Related: Linda Sarsour 03/08/2024 Remember that Terror Compound in New Mexico? Linda Sarsour 12/25/2023 ‘Christmas Is Cancelled’ Anti-Israel Activists Blockade London’s Busiest Shopping Street Ahead of Christmas Linda Sarsour 10/19/2023 Father convicted of terrorism after remains of 3-year-old found in tunnels of New Mexico compound |
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Europe |
Uyghurs, Tibetans Condemn France for Hosting 'Genocidal Ogre' Xi Jinping |
2024-05-09 |
[Breitbart] Human rights activists and Uyghur organization leaders staged a protest on Monday in Paris to condemn President Emmanuel Macron’s enthusiastic welcome to China’s genocidal dictator Xi Jinping. Xi landed in Paris on Sunday for an extended tour of Europe also including stops in Russia-friendly Serbia and one of China’s most eager partners in the predatory Belt and Road Initiative (BRI), Hungary. In France, Xi held a trilateral meeting on Monday with Macron and European Union President Ursula von der Leyen that focused primarily on economic cooperation. Reports from the meeting indicated that neither Macron nor von der Leyen address the rampant human rights abuses Xi has commanded the Communist Party to commit in China, most prominently the deliberate extermination of the Uyghur people of occupied East Turkistan. |
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Government Corruption |
US Fentanyl Crisis Is A 'CCP-Run Operation', Says Peter Schweizer |
2024-04-20 |
[ZERO] In March 2021, the Chinese Communist Party’s (CCP) Overseas United Working Committee recognized Wan Kuok Koi, also known as "Broken Tooth," as a "patriotic businessman" and the "chief representative" of all international Hongmen associations. Hongmen is synonymous with triads, or Chinese transnational organized crime syndicates, to many Chinese. The awarding entity is a CCP United Front organization and a platform under the China Association for Science and Technology. It also pushes China’s flagship infrastructure program, the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI), worldwide. According to the Treasury Department notice, Mr. Wan has established a security company protecting BRI investments in Southeast Asia. In a recent interview with EpochTV’s American Thought Leaders (ATL), investigative writer Peter Schweizer cited Mr. Wan’s case as an example of the CCP’s take on the United States’ fentanyl crisis. "The notion that ’oh, China’s trying very hard, but they can’t fix this’ is an absolute joke in my mind," he said. In addition, the author of a new book titled "Blood Money: Why the Powerful Turn a Blind Eye While China Kills Americans" told ATL that the U.S. fentanyl crisis is a "CCP-run operation." "The drug cartels are certainly involved, but they’re the junior partner," Mr. Schweizer said, adding that the CCP is present at "every link of the chain." The Chinese production of fentanyl precursors is widely known. However, Mr. Schweizer’s research also shows that China provides pill-pressing machines at cost for fentanyl-laced fake pill production, distributes the synthetic opioid in the United States, facilitates the Mexican drug cartels’ financial transactions, and provides secure communication systems to cartels so they can bypass detection by U.S. law enforcement. |
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