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Trumping Trump: The Jews And Muslims Working For Tolerance – OpEd

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US President Donald Trump played with fire in the Middle East when he announced his country would recognize Jerusalem as the capital of Israel, and he seemed to know it. The reaction, at least, cannot have surprised him. Protests rippled from the streets of the occupied West Bank, Jerusalem and Gaza through to Jakarta and Karachi but also Chicago and Tokyo. Israel launched air raids while the political leaders of the Muslim world declared the decision “null and void.”

Rhetorically, at least, the response was violent. A hastily-organised Organization of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) summit in Istanbul captured the widespread outrage with Turkey’s President Erdogan declaring Israel “an occupying state, and at the same time…a terrorist state.” Hamas went even further, saying that Trump’s decision to recognize Jerusalem “opens the gates of hell.” On the ground, though, Trump did not unleash quite the firestorm he (and Benjamin Netanyahu) may have been anticipating. Instead, the general feeling is that a bullet has been dodged and that the blowback in the occupied territories has been milder than expected.

Most explanations for this point to fatigue on the Palestinian side, but the universal global condemnation of Trump’s move may also have something to do with it. The imagery of Ambassador Nikki Haley standing alone to veto an otherwise unanimous Security Council resolution against the United States offered a powerful display of solidarity to frustrated Palestinians who may have otherwise felt abandoned.

When the dust eventually settles, Trump’s Jerusalem decision may even yield unexpected benefits. How? By strengthening the civic initiatives that have worked for decades to bridge divides while negotiations surrounding the peace process have remained stuck at the diplomatic level and held hostage by domestic political interests in Washington.

Trump has now effectively ceded America’s role as “honest broker” in the talks.While plenty of ink has already been spilled, one of the most productive ways to channel the near-universal international opposition to this bullish mischief-making would be to support (politically, financially, and morally) the civil society efforts working tirelessly in spite of opposition from hardliners on all sides.

There are many great examples to choose from. The UNESCO-backed Aladdin Project, for example, has spent the last ten years addressing interfaith tensions between Jews and Muslims across the Middle East. The project brings people together with its guiding belief that knowledge, education, and the primacy of history and moral values can vanquish the chasms created by ignorance, prejudice, hate and competing memories.

That work has been bolstered by key backers such as Saudi-Austrian philanthropist Sheikh Mohamed bin Issa Al Jaber, who received the Aladdin Project’s 2017 “Dialogue of Cultures” award in Paris for his “visionary leadership to promote intercultural dialogue based on universal values” and his “decades-long campaign for meaningful educational reform in the Arab world and beyond.”

Al Jaber’s universalist approach to cultural dialogue and tolerance in the Arab world has long set himself apart from other leading Saudi figures. Fortunately, Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman’s promises of a return to moderate Islam and efforts to rein in hardline clerics shows his country is catching up to that example.

May other initiatives are more local in character. The Israel-Palestine: Creative Regional Initiatives (IPCRI) is a non-profit think tank founded by leading activist Gershon Baskin almost 30 years ago to “engage policymakers and the public and large in ending the occupation and promoting a just and sustainable solution to the conflict.” Within Israel, the Sikkuy movement wants to establish equality (a fundamental requirement for true democracy) between all Israeli citizens, whatever their background.

All of these initiatives recognize that true religious tolerance means going beyond initiatives that distil people down to being “Jews and Muslims” or “Israelis and Arabs.” Embracing humanist values of equality on all sides (and within each community) is a far more sustainable way of fostering acceptance and rejecting polarized narratives.

Educators are on the front line in advocating this shift. Mixed schools such as those run by Kibbutzim College are slowly gaining momentum. Mohammed Dajani Daoudi, a former guerilla for the Palestine Liberation Organization who was banned from Israel for 25 years because of his prominent role in Fatah, founded a group named Wasatia ( “moderation”) in 2007 to promote Islamic traditions of compromise and nonviolence. In 2014, he began teaching Palestinians at universities in the West Bank about the Holocaust, even taking students on a trip to Birkenau. Next year, Israeli organisation Givat Haviva will open a school for Israeli, Palestinian and other Middle Eastern and world students in the hope that studying together will stop both Israelis and Palestinians “othering” the other side.

These are all good examples of initiatives and individuals working towards peace in Israel and Palestine, but they cannot shift the mass of public opinion on either side of the West Side Barrier without help. The grass grows greenest where you water it.

While “peace in the Middle East” is more often used as an oxymoron, other “intractable” conflicts like Northern Ireland show us that nothing is impossible. Earlier this year, independent British think tank BICOM and the Israel’s Fathom group drew on some of those lessons to explain why grassroots peacebuilding projects constitute a “vital missing ingredient” in the Israel-Palestine peace process.

With politicians showing scant inclination to work seriously for a peaceful resolution, it is time for those inside the region and out who are committed to peace to start funding the projects that give power back to people on the ground. UN resolutions are well and good, but education and civic education are far better.

*Khaled Alaswad is a Jordanian-born risk management consultant who has been working out of Abu Dhabi, UAE for the past five years. Before that, he lived in Michigan in the United States while completing his degree in public policy and subsequently worked in Amman and Beirut before moving to the Emirates. His work has previously been published on Middle East Monitor and Your Middle East.


Higher Salaries And Lower Prices Top Egyptians’ Wish Lists – OpEd

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By Khalaf Ahmad Al-Habtoor*

The unseated Muslim Brotherhood President Mohammed Mursi left the Egyptian economy in a shambles. Foreign reserves were depleted. Foreign investment dried up. Those were the darkest days, literally, thanks to constant electricity blackouts. That said, since 2013, the government has without a doubt made progress.

Foreign reserves are at their highest in Egypt’s history. The Egyptian Exchange has seen healthy gains. In the third quarter of 2017, tourism leapt 55 percent higher than during the same period a year earlier. And, with the largest gas field in the Mediterranean (Zohr), now operational and with smaller fields poised to follow suit, the nation will be self-sufficient in energy by 2018.

Cairo is making massive investments in infrastructure. An airport being constructed in Giza is set to begin service in summer 2018, as well as another north of Cairo. New cities in Alamein and Aswan are being built, along with the new administrative capital. The world’s largest seawater desalination plant is underway on the Red Sea. And some 2,085 new factories have been established over 25 governorates.

The International Monetary Fund (IMF) projects GDP growth at 4.5 percent in the fiscal year 2017/18. However, there has been no trickle-down effect benefiting the daily lives of ordinary folk.

With Egypt’s population, currently approaching 100 million, expected to rise to 150 million within 30 years (provided existing birth rates continue), the government is planning for the long term.

The problem is that people — other than those with millions in banks earning up to 20 percent annual interest — fail to glimpse the sunshine; on the contrary, many of my Egyptian friends say they are struggling to keep their heads above water. Those in low income brackets tell me that lamb, beef, chicken and certain cheeses are now luxury items.

While I am not a believer in the “live now, pay later” principle, I do feel that more attention should be paid to the needs of the poorest sectors of society and the middle-classes, whose pockets are being severely squeezed by high inflation (25.4 percent in November) caused by the flotation of the Egyptian pound in November 2016; a move in compliance with the terms of a $10 billion IMF loan.

Prices of almost everything soared almost overnight, including basics such as food, transport and electricity, while, simultaneously, fuel subsidies have been reduced. In some areas, property prices have doubled, making home ownership impossible for many. Moreover, being approved for a personal bank loan is not easy and those who are successful can expect to pay exorbitant interest rates.

Unfortunately, salaries have not kept pace with inflation and that is an understatement. Civil servants, police, teachers and doctors working in government hospitals are grossly underpaid, as well as private sector employees. Corruption cannot be combated as long as workers go hungry.

I frequently spend a few days in Cairo to catch up with friends, who tell me that, while investment in infrastructure is all well and good, their priorities are better schools, teaching standards, health care and job opportunities; their thoughts reflected by innumerable posts on social media.

 

While it is the case that infrastructure projects have created jobs, much of the construction work is being undertaken by the Armed Forces Engineering Authority. To be fair, the army should be credited for building housing units for low-income workers and slum residents that are delivered to recipients fully furnished.

In a nutshell, it seems to me that there is a dire need to brighten the public mood. Egyptians say they are receiving little benefit from the government’s grand plan for the future at this moment in time, and worse they feel they are being made to pay too high a price.

I pray that the Arab world’s beating heart will succeed, but Egyptians need to be enthused; they need to feel they are partners in this great recovery effort in the same way that Emiratis did when the late Sheikh Rashid bin Saeed Al-Maktoum began his transformation of Dubai from scratch.

The discovery of a limited quantity of oil did give Dubai a jumpstart, but the secret of the emirate’s success lies with the unified spirit prevalent between our rulers and people. Sheikh Rashid used to drive around town listening to his people’s concerns, no matter how small, and usually acted to alleviate them.

Egyptians have been asked to exercise patience and, while I get that Rome was not built in a day and neither will the New Egypt, millions are in desperate need for relief from biting poverty now. There should be a safety net to lift a quarter of the population out from under the poverty line. Interest-free loans for small businesses and start-ups permitting householders to purchase a kiosk, open a shop or buy a taxi is one idea.

State-of-the-art technologies will also give Egypt an edge. Modern machinery and revolutionary economic planning helped West Germany to rise from the rubble of the Second World War and emerge as one of the planet’s major economic powerhouses; likewise, Japan was recognized as the world’s second-largest economy by the 1960s.
Tokyo cultivated a strong work ethic among the population and made loans freely available. Free market principles devoid of stifling bureaucracy accelerated its spectacular trajectory.

If there is one piece of advice I would give the powers that be in Egypt, it has to be to get rid of the red tape and the armies of low-level civil servants, some of whom make it their life’s mission to place obstacles in the way of potential foreign investors.

Slim down rules and regulations. Crack down hard on corruption. And please ensure the streets are free of garbage, with televised public interest campaigns and spot fines for litterers.

Egyptians fiercely love their country but they are exhausted from all the sacrifices they have had to make since January 2011, exacerbated by rocketing prices. The government does have a lot on its plate, not least containing the terrorist threats from Daesh affiliates in northern Sinai. Nevertheless, making concessions to lighten its people’s load right now would not only be wise, it would be the right thing to do.

• Khalaf Ahmad Al-Habtoor is a prominent UAE businessman and public figure. He is renowned for his views on international political affairs, his philanthropic activity, and his efforts to promote peace. He has long acted as an unofficial ambassador for his country abroad. Twitter: @KhalafAlHabtoor

Saudi Marine Sports Find A Home At King Abdullah Economic City

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By Mohammed Al-Kinani

The chairman of the Saudi Federation of Marine Sports, Prince Abdullah bin Saud bin Mohammed on Wednesday launched the marina and boat club at the King Abdullah Economic City’s Bay La Sun Hotel.

The event was attended by the CEO and managing director of King Abdullah Economic City (KAEC), Fahd Al-Rasheed, along with a number of KAEC executives.

Prince Abdullah bin Saud said that millions of tourists are expected in Saudi Arabia in the coming years, and “we have to get ready for that with all water-related activities and events we can organize.”

“I expect that there will be no less than a million tourist visas in the first two years, and the number will annually rise due to the good tourism reputation of the Kingdom,” he told Arab News.

He added that dive tourism was an important attraction in Kingdom as the Red Sea has been classified as one of the best seas in the world.

Responding to a question by Arab News as to why they chose King Abdullah Economic City in particular to start their activities, despite the fact that KAEC is nearly 100 kilometers north of Jeddah, the chairman said that marine sports events to be held in Jeddah would be in different parts of the city, and KAEC is not that far from the heart of Jeddah. “It is a 50-minute drive,” he said.

He added that KAEC would be a new platform for encouraging marine sports. He also added the federation is planning to set up clubs for marine sports so that they could prepare young people to compete in regional and international marine sports.

“We cannot have true marine sports unless we have clubs to prepare the youth to participate in regional and global competitions. For that reason, I have filed a request with the General Sport Authority to establish marine clubs in Jeddah, the Tabuk region, Yanbu, Asir region, Jazan, the Eastern Province and Al-Jouf’s Dawmat Al-Jandal Lake.

The group CEO and managing director of KAEC, Fahd Al-Rasheed, told Arab News that they were enthusiastic about participating in the promising success of the Saudi tourism industry.

“We are investing heavily in the leisure sector with over thirty projects in global sports and hotels, or in other areas,” he said.

Al-Rasheed added that their aim is to become a destination for tourism and leisure. “This year we have been able to attract 400,000 visitors for our leisure activities. Next year, our target will be 700,000, while we will be targeting a million visitors in 2019,” he said.

He further said that that they had many plans for marine-related leisure activities, and the opening of the club with the marina will significantly help them in attracting those who like to dive and enjoy the Red Sea, or those who would like to go fishing.

As an experienced developer, Al-Rasheed, former deputy governor for the Saudi Arabian General Investment Authority (SAGIA), pays great attention to protecting and preserving the environment.

“We want to be in a sustainable endeavor to protect the environment and to protect this treasure, the Red Sea, for future generations,” he added.

Erdogan And The Jerusalem Issue – OpEd

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Turkey’s president, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, is a thoroughgoing Muslim Brotherhood adherent, and has been since he first entered politics. During his early years as prime minister, back in the early 2000s, he was careful not to promote too radical an agenda too soon. Despite his Islamist views, he made an official visit to Israel in 2005 to be feted by Israeli prime minister, Ariel Sharon. However it was not long before the previously close relations between Turkey and Israel began to sour. The turning point came in 2009, with the first conflict between Israel and Hamas, which had seized power in the Gaza strip and had been firing rockets indiscriminately into Israel.

In the annual international gathering at Davos that year, Erdogan could not restrain himself. Rounding on Israeli President Shimon Peres, Erdogan called the Israeli operation in the Gaza Strip a “crime against humanity” and “barbaric.” Wagging his finger at Peres, he declared: “When it comes to killing, you know very well how to kill. I know very well how you hit and killed children on beaches.” Then, infuriated by the moderator’s refusal to allow him more time in response to Peres’s emotional rebuke, he stalked off the stage.

Between that first indication of Erdogan’s extreme Islamist stance and his intemperate reaction to the announcement by US President Donald Trump on December 6, 2017 recognizing Jerusalem as Israel’s capital, lies the great barren waste of the Mavi Marmara affair – an encounter on the high seas between Israeli soldiers and a Turkish flotilla of six vessels, nominally on a humanitarian mission to relieve what had been described as the siege of Gaza. During the encounter, nine of those on board the Mavi Marama lost their lives.

Erdogan manipulated the event into a rupture of Turkish-Israeli relations lasting six years. But the series of investigations that followed revealed a cynical anti-Israel plot planned with the connivance of Turkey’s ruling AKP party and possibly of Erdogan himself, its leader.

Under the cloak of providing humanitarian aid to Gaza, an operation aimed at instigating a confrontation with Israel was meticulously planned. A six-ship flotilla was organised by western activists working with the Turkish IHH movement, a non-governmental organization supported by the Turkish government with a long track record of gun-running and violence in support of Islamist causes world-wide. The lead ship Mavi Marmara was purchased by the IHH from a major shipping company owned by the Istanbul Municipality, which is run by the ruling AKP party. Far from being crammed to the gunwales with humanitarian aid, three of the six ships in the convoy actually carried no aid at all. Mavi Marmara was one such.

To this end, some 40 armed activists were ushered aboard the leading ship of the flotilla – the Mavi Marmara – at a different embarkation point from the rest of the passengers, and without any of the security checks to which they were subject.  They were led by the head of the IHH.

A Turkish journalist on board the Mavi Marmara said: “The flotilla was organized with the support of the Turkish government, and prime minister Erdogan gave the instructions for it to set sail.”

Israel’s botched military intervention, and the consequent death of nine of the militants, provided Erdogan with a political and diplomatic bonus he could scarcely have hoped for. He was not slow to exploit it, condemning Israel for committing a “massacre”. The involvement of his AKP party in the plot remained largely hidden.

It took six long years of intensive negotiations before the affair was finally put to rest in June 2016. But even though Erdogan publicly slighted Israel on an almost daily basis, Israeli-Turkish trade grew massively over the period. In May 2017 a large Turkish business delegation visited Israel, enthusiastically advocating a 150 percent increase in Turkish-Israeli trade over the next five years.

“We need to change the perception of the Israeli citizens and the Turkish citizens toward one another,” said Mehmet Buyukeksi, chairman of the Turkish Exporters Assembly.

Erdogan’s reaction to the Trump announcement on Jerusalem, however, seemed to presage a replay of the Mavi Marmara situation. Speaking in parliament in Ankara, Erdogan declared: “Jerusalem is a red line for Muslims. This could lead us to break off our diplomatic relations with Israel.”

Three days later he turned his ire on Israel, which he described as a “terrorist state”, vowing to use all means to fight against the US recognition of Jerusalem as the capital of Israel. Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu decided to give as good as he got in the battle of words. Denouncing Erdogan as a brutal dictator, he declared “I am not used to receiving lectures about morality from a leader who bombs Kurdish villagers in his native Turkey, who jails journalists, who helps Iran get around international sanctions, and who helps terrorists, including in Gaza, kill innocent people.”

Erdogan emerged from the Mavi Marmara episode with greatly enhanced prestige both domestically and more widely in the Muslim world. Now he is again seizing the initiative. He convened a special meeting of the Organization of Islamic Cooperation, of which he is currently president. Presenting himself as the Muslim defender of Jerusalem. he condemned Trump’s announcement, castigated the Arab world for its lacklustre response and called on world powers to recognize Jerusalem as the capital of Palestine.

Erdogan has three additional reasons for rounding on the United States. First, he hates the assistance America is giving the Syrian Kurds, who are fighting successfully against Islamic State. Second, the US has so far refused to extradite Fethullah Gulen, the leader of the rival religious movement whom Erdogan accuses of initiating the abortive coup against him in July 2016. Third, and most embarrassing to Erdogan, is the trial currently under way in New York involving Iranian-Turkish businessman Reza Zarrab.

Zarrab is a key witness in the criminal trial of Turkish banker Mehmet Hakan Atilla. In his testimony Zarrab has implicated Erdogan in an international money laundering scheme that he and the banker ran between 2010 and 2015, which allegedly allowed Iran access to global markets despite UN and US sanctions. He testified that in 2012 he was told by Turkey’s then economy minister that Erdogan, who was prime minister at the time, had instructed Turkish banks to participate in the multi-million dollar scheme.

Erdogan’s most recent threat was to establish a Turkish embassy, accredited to the state of Palestine, in East Jerusalem. Whether making a big stir about the Jerusalem issue will succeed in diverting the world’s attention from other, more embarrassing, matters only time will tell.

Russian Airstrikes Pound Northern Hama In Syria

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The Russian Aerospace Forces carried out a relentless series of airstrikes over the northern Hama countryside on Thursday, December 21, targeting the jihadist strongholds of Kafr Zita and Al-Lataminah, Al-Masdar News reports.

The Russian jets would then turn their attention to the Hama-Idlib axis, where they launched several airstrikes over the jihadist-held towns of Musharifah and Abu Dali.

According to a military source in the area, the Russian jets scored several direct hits on the jihadist positions that could be seen from the Syrian Army’s front-lines along the Hama-Idlib axis.

The Syrian Army is now preparing to launch their assault on the town of Musharifah, which is currently under the control of Hayat Tahrir Al-Sham.

US Blacklists Serbian Arms Dealer Tesic

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By Maja Zivanovic

The US on Thursday listed Slobodan Tesic among a host of world figures blacklisted as human rights abusers and corrupt actors, calling him ‘one of the biggest arms dealers in the Balkans’.

Slobodan Tesic, described as “the biggest dealers of arms and munitions in the Balkans”, is among 39 individuals and entities on whom the US imposed sanctions on Thursday.

“Tesic is among the biggest dealers of arms and munitions in the Balkans; he spent nearly a decade on the United Nations (UN) Travel Ban List for violating UN sanctions against arms exports to Liberia,” the US Treasury Department said.

It is added that in order to secure arms contracts with various countries, “Tesic would directly or indirectly provide bribes and financial assistance to officials”.

The US added that Tesic also took potential clients on “high-value vacations, paid for their children’s education at western schools or universities, and used large bribes to secure contracts”.

The US press release recalled that Donald Trump’s administration had launched a new sanctions regime targeting human rights abusers and corrupt actors around the world.

Building on the Global Magnitsky Human Rights Accountability Act passed by Congress last year, it is added, that President Trump had signed an Executive Order on Thursday, declaring a national emergency with respect to serious human rights abuses and corruption around the world and providing for the imposition of sanctions on actors engaged in these malign activities.

As the US note recalled, Tesic owns or controls two Serbian companies, Partizan Tech and Technoglobal Systems DOO Beograd, and two Cyprus-based companies, Grawit Limited and Charso Limited.

“Tesic negotiates the sale of weapons via Charso Limited and used Grawit Limited as a mechanism to fund politicians,” the press release said, and added that in a related action, the Office for Foreign Assets Control, OFAC, had frozen the US assets of Preduzece Za Trgovinu Na Veliko I Malo Partizan Tech DOO Beograd-Savski Venac (“Partizan Tech”), Charso Limited, Grawit Limited, and Technoglobal Systems DOO Beograd.

“Today, the United States is taking a strong stand against human rights abuse and corruption globally by shutting these bad actors out of the U.S. financial system. The Treasury is freezing their assets and publicly denouncing the egregious acts they’ve committed, sending a message that there is a steep price to pay for their misdeeds,” Secretary of the Treasury Steven T. Mnuchin said.

As a result of Thursday’s actions, it is noted, all of the assets within US jurisdiction of the individuals and entities included in the Annex to the Order or designated by OFAC are blocked, and US persons are generally prohibited from engaging in transactions with them.

BIRN previously reported about Tesic’s businesses and his connection to controversial Serbian supplies of weapons to Libya.

Tesic was placed on a UN black list for more than a decade because of sanctions-busting in Liberia.

BIRN tried to contact Tesic but he was not available for an immediate reaction.

Thank A Libertarian Write-In Candidate For Roy Moore’s Election Loss? – OpEd

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Election after election people in the media throw out spurious assertions that Libertarian Party candidates cause Republicans to lose. So it was little surprise to come across an article published last week with the title “Relieved by Roy Moore’s defeat? Thank a Libertarian.” What was surprising wat that this article was published at the website of the United States Libertarian Party.

In the article credited as written by party staff, Libertarian National Committee Chairman Nicholas Sarwark is quoted as saying the following in regard to the defeat of Republican nominee Roy Moore by Democratic nominee Doug Jones in the United States Senate special election last week in Alabama: “If you’re happy that Roy Moore was not elected to the Senate, thank write-in candidates like Libertarian Ron Bishop.”

The article backs up this assertion by noting three factors: first, that the Libertarian write-in candidate and other write-in candidates won a total of 22,780 votes amounting to about 2,000 more votes than Jones’ margin of victory over Moore, second, that “[e]ven President Donald Trump acknowledged in a tweet that ‘The write-in votes played a very big factor’ in determining the outcome,” and, third, that “[c]onsidering the slim margin of victory in such a heavily Republican state, though, Bishop probably turned far more voters away from Moore than from Jones.”

Let’s address each factor in turn. First, that the write-in candidates won more votes than the margin of victory of the Democrat over the Republican shows in no way that the presence of write-in candidates caused the Republican to loose. It is just a mathematical observation, no more.

Second, it does not make sense for libertarians to defer to the authority of President Donald Trump’s tweets. Should we expect the Libertarian Party, for example, to start supporting the income tax or the drug war because of something Trump tweets? The party ran a candidate against Trump in 2016 and can be expected to run a presidential candidate again in 2020 irrespective of whether Trump seeks reelection.

Third, just reread this sentence carefully: “Considering the slim margin of victory in such a heavily Republican state, though, Bishop probably turned far more voters away from Moore than from Jones.” There is no argument in this sentence. It is just the statement of a couple facts followed by a conclusion that has no apparent connection to those facts. Yet, this non-argument is claimed to be so powerful that it should, for this Alabama US Senate election, lead us to reject the application of the claim in the previous sentence of the article that “Libertarian candidates usually draw equally from disaffected Republicans, Democrats, and independents.” Also, remember that those 20,000-plus votes were split among several other write-in candidates in addition to Bishop, the Libertarian.

I provided a detailed retort to the often repeated assertion that Libertarian candidates “spoil” elections for Republicans in my July of 2014 article “Media Blaming Libertarians for Republican Candidates’ Losses Four Months Before Election.”

This article was published by RonPaul Institute.

The Geopolitics Of Sanctions Against Russia – Analysis

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By Giancarlo Elia Valori

The US and EU sanctions currently operating against the Russian Federation were imposed following the Russian support for the “separatists” of the Eastern areas of Donetsk and Lugansk, Ukraine, namely ethnically Russian areas, which wanted to separate – or more likely to become autonomous – from the rest of the country.

It is hard to say whether the Ukrainian conflict was started at first by the Euromaidan‘s pro-Western militants or if either one or the former used violent ways and means because, as usual, the issue of sanctions is mainly political: to force – with mandatory commercial limitations extra omnes or, in any case, for the countries adhering to the primary international organizations – to reduce the political, economic, financial and hence military potential of a target country.

With four executive orders, the United States has imposed a sequence of sanctions against Russia, while it is still unclear whether the sanction regime always fully hits the target country or if it manages to direct its negative repercussions only to the geopolitical sector to be targeted.

In the long history of sanctions the excess of punishments towards the target country has always been a classic strategy, which later succeeds inadvertently to create mass support for the “bad” leader or the “dangerous” party, regardless of its being populist, sovereignist, “racist” or otherwise.

Today the old ideologies of Evil do not apply any longer – hence we need to invent a new labelling for global defamation, well beyond the usual totalitarianism. Or we need to artfully create many media opportunities that often – if photographed – have no actual relationship with the crimes perpetrated by the target State.

In a way, sanctions are essentially the planned exclusion of the target country from the world market: in the case of Russia, the US sanctions are aimed at restricting the Russian access to the international financial services, to the US energy industry and obviously to the military industry.

These goals purpose are attainable both by reporting and blocking the personal and financial movements of specific personalities, such as entrepreneurs, financiers and managers of the target State placed in specific lists, now often public.

Or goods and capital are blocked.

Or again, always according to the American operating tradition, the potential for debt of an enterprise of the enemy State may be reduced significantly, but only on the international market. Or there may be the prohibition of making certain goods, services and technologies available to the “target country”.

In essence, for the Russian Federation this still regards the extraction and refining of natural gas and oil.

Furthermore, the US sanctions against Russia are aimed at restricting the export of Russian military products and, in any case, imposing the block for spare parts or the construction of weapon systems that can ultimately be used in Russia as well.

In the United States the economic sanctions are administered by OFAC and export controls are managed by the US Department of Commerce, Bureau of Industry and Security, in addition to the US Department of State, Directorate of Defense Trade Controls.

Without further complicating the framework, Directive No. 1 of OFAC regards the financial and service sectors of the Russian economy.

It prohibits any transaction longer than thirty days with all the subjects included in the lists regarding people of Russian origin or, in any case, operating in favour of the Russian government.

Directive No. 2 prevents any type of economic or financial transaction for individuals and entities dealing with, offering or carrying out transactions, on behalf of the Russian system, relating to natural gas and oil coming from the Russian territory.

Following the same procedure of the above mentioned transactions, Directive No. 3 deals with control and exclusion of the Russian Federation from the global market of military technologies.

Finally, Directive No. 4 regards the ban on normal commercial relations with Russia regarding the oil and gas from the Arctic and the unspecified “neighbouring areas”.

In 2014, by imposing measures “against the Russian industrial sector”, the above mentioned Bureau of Industry and Security (BIS) implemented and improved the sanctions imposing a specific license on Russia for some commercial products, especially if the exporters “know whether what they sell to Russia can be used, directly or indirectly, for gas and oil extraction or whether these exports can be used for deepwater exploration in Russia or anyway in the Arctic.

Furthermore, the aforementioned BIS blocks any export of products that may anyway contain parts which can be used in the current weapon systems.

After the “events” occurred in Crimea, the EU sanctions against Russia are quite different from the US ones, although they may often overlap.

This is the sign of a political and strategic overlapping that cannot takes us a long way and that, indeed, many military elites, including NATO’s, consider obsolete.

This is certainly not due to anti-Americanism, but to a complex assessment of the EU and US strategic and commercial goals.

Overlapping of new areas of influence or their natural future divergence? Naturally different interests between the EU and the United States in Africa and the Middle East or not?

The issue is complex and not well-defined yet.

Europe, however, has imposed more traditional sanctions against the Russian Federation, regarding individuals and implying travel bans or freezing of funds.

Furthermore, measures are envisaged in the EU limiting the access to financial capital for specific Russian financial and defence institutions.

There are also restrictions on the export of dual-use goods and technologies that may somehow refer to war operations, as well as other restrictions relating to the technologies included in the Common Military List, and obviously other restrictions on oil technologies.

There are many differences between the two sanction regimes.

The United States scrutinizes both oil and those working in this industry, while Europe only oil.

With specific reference to the EU sanctions, however, the Duma proposes to block the “commercial paper” issued by GAZPROM, which would imply that the European oil companies could be sanctioned if they bought GAZPROM payment notes which, however, are extraterritorial.

For the EU, currently the companies Rosneft, Transneft and Gazpromneft are the only ones that have been sanctioned.

None of the two sanction regimes, however, makes explicit references to “natural gas” – only oil is always mentioned.

Moreover the EU legislation is not extraterritorial while, in case of suspicious dollar “transactions” through American banks, the US legislation can manage these transactions as if they were made on its national territory.

Has the United States probably built the complex web of anti-Russian sanctions since 2004 with a view to weakening the European competition?

As we will see later on, this is another possible hypothesis.

Besides seriously harming the European economy, which some important media sources estimate at over 100 billion euro for the whole EU, as well as two million jobs lost, we must consider that the effects are even more complex for the United States.

For the Russian Federation, however, the sanction effects are quite complex, even though it is a simple “target country”.

In 2009 the Russian economy shrank immediately by 2.8%, following the classic rule whereby the economies subjected to sanctions are more sensitive to the asymmetric shocks coming from outside.

The following year, however, Russia grew by 4.5%, thus showing signs of recovery indicating a centralized and planned reaction to both the global crisis and the economic war operations, namely the sanctions against it.

Foreign investment in Russia is still falling and, according to the latest data of the Bank for International Settlements, loans from abroad have fallen from 225 to 103 billion euro.

Hence not many dangerous effects, except for the magnification of the negative fluctuations on international markets.

So far Russia has reacted to the closure of some Western markets with a brilliant and unexpected geopolitical move for the United States, namely the rapprochement with China.

In this regard, the effects are clear: the rapprochement has favoured the block of the Ukrainian crisis, which becomes secondary in the Kremlin scenario. It has also facilitated the entry – even informally – of a large mass of Chinese capital into Russia and has finally added strategic value to the economic relationship between Russia and China.

The rapprochement has favoured not only the commercial flows between the two countries, which had been falling since 2015, but has mainly given rise to old and new bilateral projects: a pipeline, other infrastructural networks and cross-border free trade areas.

Furthermore, Russia and China, which are alien and even opposed to the logic of sanctions, are creating financial and commercial institutions according to their autonomous criteria, which will certainly be immune from US and EU sanctions.

As Putin knows all too well, the problem is that the relationship with China is fully asymmetric and runs the risk of generating Russian dependence on China.

Furthermore Russia is not interested in the tension between China and the United States and does not want to be “involved” in the bilateral trade competition between China and the United States.

The positive aspects for Russia are the following: Russian weapons are particularly suitable for the Chinese market and the plans for the Siberian pipeline between Russia and China are still in place; Shanghai and Hong Kong will soon become the financial bases for many Russian companies; the vast commercial area thus created between South Korea, Vietnam and Taiwan already establishes a small Asian “EU system” that can act as an important stimulus for reviving the Russian economy.

On the other hand, China has never appreciated the Russian move on Crimea, even though it has never officially pronounced itself in this regard.

Never “make a sound in the East, then strike in the West”. Currently there are not the conditions for China to require – at military and strategic levels – what the “Western devils” can already provide at economic level.

Moreover, the strategic suicide of the West is already fine as it is.

And again, the US and EU sanctions have enabled China to prevent its worst-case scenario in the Heartland, namely the final economic and political integration between Russia and Eastern Europe in the EU.

Moreover, this expansion east of the Russian Federation corresponds to a series of counter-sanctions culminating, for Russia, in the ban on European fruit and vegetables. The agricultural sector has been systematically brought to its knees by the Russian policies, which have created farmers’ strong political pressure to lift the sanctions against the Russian Federation.

Political use of an economic choice, namely counter-sanctions where the European “enemy” is weaker, that is in the protected and subsidized economy of the European agribusiness sector.

The Russian response has been the expansion of domestic production, with the strong help of Belarus supporting the “missing share” of the new “internal production”.

The countermeasures of Russian consumers are as follows: certainly prices have risen, but they buy less and even fish consumption is falling.

Nevertheless, if we go back to the general architecture of sanctions against the Russian Federation, we can note many other facts.

For example, we can note that – apart from the weak traditional and media justification, with many “violent acts” artfully caused by militants of uncertain nature – the oil sanctions are designed to reach one single purpose, namely to make Europeans – who for too long have not “resorted to” the US producers – buy the shale oil and gas they are finally able to produce, indeed already in a situation of almost full energy self-sufficiency.

Hence sanctions decided in the United States to compete with the North Stream 2 between Russia and Germany, crossing the Baltic and cutting the cost of natural gas to such levels that only dumping from the United States can be carried out to impose its gas against the one which can be found closer to our countries.

Dumping is useless: we can build an integrated economy between the United States, the EU and Russia, with new geopolitical “rules of engagement”.

Hence the US sanctions are sanctions against Europe to rebuild manu militari the transatlantic market that could not be put back together elsewhere, not even in the agri-food sector where, in fact, the laws are already so differentiated between the United States and the EU to make any exchange impossible.

Economic war through rules and regulations.

However, while the dollar has risen to 76% against the ruble since the beginning of sanctions in 2014, it remains anyway excluded from the Russian domestic market – hence it is a Pyrrhic victory.

In short, the Russian Foreign Minister, Sergei Lavrov, is right when he says that “sanctions are used to impose a regime change in Russia”.

Between 2014 and 2017, some studies ascertained that there was a fall in the Russian GDP and some damage to its economy worth at least 170 billion US dollars.

Italy alone lost at least 1.25 billion euros, especially in the agri-food and small craft sectors.

However, let us revert to Lavrov: he is the right mediator and broker to gradually and reasonably put an end to the sanction regime imposed by the United States and the EU against the Russian Federation, of which he has been the Minister for Foreign Affairs since 2004.

Lavrov, who knows that “there are no alternatives to dialogue”, also knows that Russia has not well clarified the situation of Crimea – beyond the objective truth which is hard to verify.

In this case it is not a matter of discussing the right of the Russian-speaking populations in the region to join the motherland. The issue lies in finding how to create a united Ukraine, really respectful of its minorities and, above all, as autonomous from Russia as from the European and NATO designs.

A trilateral treaty between the EU, the United States and Russia could be a good starting point.

Lavrov has the mediation skills and long experience needed for the job.

At strategic level, it must be clear that NATO no longer expands itself towards the Donbass area and the Ukrainian-Georgian region, while the Russian influence operations – either covert or not – on those countries’ governments will be prohibited.

Obviously old wounds and new appetites return: Poland’s desire to regain Ukraine it misses; the US and NATO passion for encircling the Russian Federation which, however, has already emerged from this encirclement with a clear victory in Syria, which proves its great strategic wisdom.

The encirclement of Russia with the NATO and US autonomous power is fully irrational.

The US bases encircle also Iran, another Russian inevitable ally: but what is the US strategic logic?

Hence a mediation will be needed, implying to reassure the United States that in Ukraine and Georgia there will never be “anti-Western” regimes, but Russia must be sure that all EU, Polish, US and other countries’ operations will not be such as to try to convince Ukrainians and Georgians to let Russia down in the region.

Moreover Russia shall make it clear that – after years of disastrous legacy of the “Cold War” – its policy is trying to let the United States enter again new and old regions. These regions, however, must not be thought as no longer being in a situation of equilibrium – as we could reason at the time of the “Cold War” and of the unfortunate post-Cold War period – since said equilibrium does no longer rely on strategic thinking, but on small territorial or positional conquests.

Furthermore, the United States could de-escalate tension with China through its new relations with Russia, which would act as an effective mediator and broker just because Russia has not – and will never have – common strategic and geopolitical interests with China.

If we begin to think in multipolar terms – where the United States has often developed its longest and most brilliant geopolitical projects – everything gets clearer.

This could be Lavrov’s new job to be performed along with his US counterpart Tillerson.

About the author:
*Professor Giancarlo Elia Valori
is an eminent Italian economist and businessman. He holds prestigious academic distinctions and national orders. Mr Valori has lectured on international affairs and economics at the world’s leading universities such as Peking University, the Hebrew University of Jerusalem and the Yeshiva University in New York. He currently chairs “La Centrale Finanziaria Generale Spa”, he is also the honorary president of Huawei Italy, economic adviser to the Chinese giant HNA Group and member of the Ayan-Holding Board. In 1992 he was appointed Officier de la Légion d’Honneur de la République Francaise, with this motivation: “A man who can see across borders to understand the world” and in 2002 he received the title of “Honorable” of the Académie des Sciences de l’Institut de France.

Source:
This article was published by Modern Diplomacy


EU and Mexico Fail To Conclude Political Agreement On Trade Deal

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By Iana Dreyer

(EurActiv) — There will be no modernised trade deal with Mexico for Christmas. Despite having spent three days in Brussels, Mexican economy minister Ildefonso Guajardo hasn’t managed to break the deadlock over the contentious outstanding issues, geographical indications and investment protection.

The modernisation of the EU-Mexico global agreement launched in 2016 has progressed significantly, with a variety of chapters advancing nicely. Areas such as energy have reportedly progressed well. Guajardo stressed that “energy is not one of the remaining issues”.

European trade officials had been more optimistic about the prospects for a deal with Mexico than with the South American bloc Mercosur, talks towards which ended in a limbo in early December. But European Commission hopes to announce a ‘political agreement’ with Mexico by year-end were nonetheless dashed.

The issues that required ironing out over the last days included market access in agriculture, agreement over a few geographical indications on cheeses (such as Manchego) and the EU’s investment court system.

EU trade chief Cecilia Malmström said today: “We are confident we can solve all the remaining political issues. But we need a little bit more time.”

Geographical indications

The Mexican government is under pressure from a group of 130 domestic cheesemakers that launched legal action last week to stop the government from agreeing to a text with the EU that would stop them from using European names for their cheeses.

The EU tabled a list of approximately 400 ‘geographical indications’ for food and drink products, with more than 60 contested by the Mexican business sector, and, reportedly, by United States producers selling in the Mexican market.

For Brussels, getting Mexico to sign on to EU-style GIs is a strategic issue that goes beyond the Mexican market: the point is to make advances vis-à-vis the US in North America. GIs were one of the most contentious issues in the now stalled trans-Atlantic TTIP negotiations.

Mexico is one of the three members of the North Atlantic Free Trade Agreement, which is being renegotiated. Canada already signed on to EU GIs in its 2016 trade accord with the bloc,known as CETA. The EU wants to add Mexico to the list.

Speaking to journalists in Brussels on Thursday (21 December), Guajardo said: “We need to find ways of coexistence of our systems [of protection of origin denomination].” Mexico uses a trademark-based system.

Investment court, rules of origin

Mexico is also sceptical about the EU’s investment court plans. Here again, Europe wants Mexico to sign on to a CETA-style bilateral investment court. The Latin American country has signed on to the idea in principle, but the government argues that the specifics need ironing out.

Further outstanding issues remain rules of origin for goods slated for duty elimination. The EU and Mexican systems clash on these texts. In textiles and autos, for instance, Mexico is keen to preserve its US- and NAFTA-inspired rules, which are very different from EU style rules of origin.

The EU is also asking Mexico to liberalise certain sectors such as maritime services – which it is reluctant to do.

Brussels is also asking Mexico to open up its public procurement markets, especially at sub-federal level. But Mexico’s federal system means it faces constitutional hurdles in asking states to sign on to liberalisation commitments.

A leading EU business lobbyist told Borderlex that his organisation would be happy to see ambitious commitments at central level, and some limited commitments at a lower political level in the areas of infrastructure, energy and health.

In the EU, there is strong resistance to opening up agricultural markets to Mexican sugar, beef and fruit – including goods such as avocados.

This week, a group of nine European NGOs called on the EU to halt the negotiations on the grounds that Brussels hadn’t undertaken a human rights impact assessment of the deal.

No new meeting date was set between EU and Mexican negotiators.

US VP Pence Pays Surprise Visit To Kabul, Claims ‘Progress’ In Afghan War

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(RFE/RL) — U.S. Vice President Mike Pence on a surprise visit to Afghanistan praised U.S. and Afghan troops for what he said was “real progress” in the 16-year war, and declared President Donald Trump’s new strategy there is working.

“The results are really beginning to become evident around the country,” he said after meeting with Afghan President Ashraf Ghani and Chief Executive Abdullah Abdullah at the presidential palace in Kabul late on December 21.

Pence said the two Afghan leaders told him “they’ve begun to see a sea change in the attitudes among the Taliban,” and Ghani told him more senior Taliban leaders have been killed this year than in all the prior years of the conflict.

Pence said the Afghan leaders also expressed hope that “eventually the enemy will tire of losing” and be willing to join peace negotiations.

Turmp this summer outlined a strategy of increasing U.S. troops on the ground and giving greater authority to U.S. military leaders to carry out the battle against the Taliban, and Pence said that approach is now bearing fruit.

Pence arrived late on December 21 on a military plane at Bagram Airfield before traveling by helicopter to Kabul. He said he told the Afghan leaders that his presence in the country was tangible evidence that the United States is “here to see this through.”

“Under President Donald Trump, the armed forces of the United States will remain engaged in Afghanistan until we eliminate the terrorist threat to our homeland, our people once and for all,” Pence said.

He later traveled back to Bagram to address some of the estimated 14,000 U.S. service members stationed in the country who provide training and assistance to Afghan forces in their battles against Taliban insurgents and other extremists.

Pence thanked the troops for their sacrifice and said, “I believe victory is closer than ever before.”

Pence also received a briefing from U.S. military leaders, including the top U.S. commander in Afghanistan, General John Nicholson.

At Bagram, Pence had sharp words for neighboring Pakistan, echoing previous comments by Trump that accused Islamabad of providing safe harbor to terrorists operating in Afghanistan.

“Those days are over,” Pence said, adding that Pakistan had much to gain from working with the United States, but much to lose by harboring “criminals and terrorists.”

Pence’s short visit to Afghanistan, originally part of a Middle East trip that was called off, was shrouded in secrecy for security reasons. Reporters traveling with the vice president were asked not to reveal his whereabouts until after Pence had addressed U.S. troops at the Bagram air base.

Catalan Pro-Independence Parties Secure Absolute Majority

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Pro-independence parties have again secured an absolute majority in the Catalan parliament, with former regional leader Carles Puigdemont poised to regain the power he had been stripped of by Madrid.

With over 99.5 percent of the votes counted, the trio of pro-independence parties: the Together for Catalonia (JxCat), headed by deposed regional president Puigdemont, the Esquerra Republicana (ERC) and the Popular Unity Candidacy (CUP) are likely to secure 70 parliamentary seats collectively, with 68 required for an absolute majority in the 135-seat assembly.

Although the Citizens Party won the election by a small margin in terms of vote share, it will only pick up 37 seats, and unlikely to form a unionist majority.

While the preliminary results signal a likely victory for the secessionists, it shows a great rift among Catalans on the question of independence. The unionist and pro-independence parties are only separated by a couple percent of votes.

The snap elections were called by Spanish Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy in October, in the aftermath of the independence referendum deemed illegal by Madrid. The October 1 independence plebiscite was marred by a central government sanctioned police crackdown on voters.

Madrid tried to downplay the violence, claiming that media materials on the chaotic referendum, contained “fake pictures.” The actions of Madrid, however, were condemned by several international organizations, including Human Rights Watch.

The NGO analyzed photos and videos from the day pf the referendum and concluded they depicted “disproportionate use of force” against peaceful demonstrators “expressing their political opinion.”

Following the declaration of independence by the Catalan government late in October, Spain responded by suspending the region’s autonomy and dismissing its government. Several pro-independence politicians were jailed, while deposed president Puigdemont managed to flee to Brussels. He had said that he would return to Catalonia if he wins. His supporters, however, fear he might be arrested, since Madrid has accused the politician of inciting a rebellion and misusing public funds.

On The Real Meaning Of Christmas – OpEd

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By Rev. Robert A. Sirico*

The culmination of the Advent season prompts many of us to revisit seasonal traditions established by our ancestral heritage and respective faiths with dashes of contemporary culture. For my family growing up, the traditional Italian celebration of Christmas was decidedly Roman Catholic, by which I mean we began honoring the anticipation of the birth of Christ in the quiet observance of Advent. The season didn’t end for us until the Feast of the Epiphany on January 6, which my mother always called “little Christmas.” Our tree came down only after that.

During this period of time, we were reminded constantly of the birth of Christ by the presence of wreaths, trees and presipi – handcrafted nativity scenes depicting the abject poverty in which the Lord our Savior was born while, at the same time, displaying the fundamental glory and dignity of God-become-Man, who insinuated himself into our material circumstance

More recently, many families have adopted personal traditions that may include attending church services more regularly, watching holiday-themed movies, enjoying special meals or participating in charitable acts benefiting the less fortunate. Although I wish attending religious services remained a priority for all families throughout the year, my experience as a parish priest, unfortunately, belies such hope.

That said, I’m always encouraged when I see my relatives, friends, co-workers and parishioners embrace their families in the celebration of Christmas each and every year in their own inimitable fashion. Each family in their own way reflects the presipi – for it is the intact family unit that best inoculates our society against poverty and its incumbent ills.

Yet, poverty persistently plagues even the most developed countries despite significant reductions rendered by medical, agricultural and technological advancements. It’s amazing to consider what my great friend, the late Michael Novak, wrote shortly before he passed earlier this year:

In 1776, there were fewer than one billion people on Earth. A vast majority of them were poor, and living under tyrannies. Just over two centuries later, there are more than seven billion human beings. Rapid medical discoveries and inventions have helped to double the average lifespan, vastly reduce infant mortality, and provide relief for hundreds of diseases.

Thanks to economic progress, six-sevenths of the greatly expanded human race has now broken free from poverty – over a billion people from 1950 to 1980, and another billion since 1980. But there are another billion more still in those chains. The Jewish, Christian, and humanist task is to break them free as well.

If I may borrow another quote, this time from the man whose name we adopted for the mission we faithfully and diligently accepted 27 years ago, Lord Acton: “Opinions alter, manners change, creeds rise and fall, but the moral law is written on the tablets of eternity.” In other words, it is our duty as servants of God and his creation to assist the poor – and to explore the best ways to attain the moral goal of eliminating the greatest amount of poverty here in this country as well as throughout the world.

The Acton Institute promotes a free and virtuous society not because it’s a phrase that simply is pleasing to the ear. We know from empirical experience that a society grown from the roots of freedom and watered regularly with virtue yields tremendous benefits for all men, women and children rather than merely a select group.

As we reflect on the real meaning of Christmas, we will unavoidably realize how seriously God takes the material world which he made, and how redemption, in the Christian understanding, is accomplished precisely through and within this material world.

May this inspire each of us to see our work as an extension of that sanctification of the world and the source of well-being, prosperity, and indeed, peace on Earth.

About the author:

*Rev. Robert A. Sirico received his Master of Divinity degree from the Catholic University of America following undergraduate study at the University of Southern California and the University of London.  During his studies and early ministry, he experienced a growing concern over the lack of training religious studies students receive in fundamental economic principles, leaving them poorly equipped to understand and address today’s social problems.  As a result of these concerns, Fr. Sirico co-founded the Acton Institute with Kris Alan Mauren in 1990.

Source:
This article was published by the Acton Institute.

The Challenge Of The New US Security Strategy – Analysis

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It veers away sharply from old priorities such as democracy promotion to focus on great power competition and economic rivalry.

By Harsh V. Pant

The new National Security Strategy (NSS) document unveiled by US President Donald Trump earlier this week showcases a world locked in unceasing economic competition. In this world, Washington is not preoccupied with promoting democracy abroad and will focus instead on great power competition, economic rivalry and homeland security. History, as they say, finally and formally ended for the liberal fallacies which had come to dominate the US foreign policy discourse and practice since the end of the Cold War.

The Trump administration has defined the new strategy as one based on “principled realism” in an “ever-competitive world”. Focusing frontally on great power politics, the new document calls Russia and China “revisionist powers” seeking to change the global status quo, and paints a stark picture of the world, rejecting cooperation in favour of competition. The US president made it clear that “China and Russia challenge American power, influence and interests, attempting to erode American security and prosperity”. The US, therefore, has to “rethink the policies of the past two decades—policies based on the assumption that engagement with rivals and their inclusion in international institutions and global commerce would turn them into benign actors and trustworthy partners”, the document says. “For the most part, this premise turned out to be false.”

It is an extraordinarily blunt attack on the two powers as Trump underlined that Russia and China “are determined to make economies less free and less fair, to grow their militaries, and to control information and data to repress their societies and expand their influence”. The US president also claimed China and Russia are developing “advanced weapons and capabilities” which could threaten the US’ “critical infrastructure and our command and control architecture”. The US is openly acknowledging that “vigorous military, economic and political contests are now playing out all around the world” and the Trump administration intends to “raise our competitive game to meet that challenge, to protect American interests, and to advance our values”. In Trump’s own words: “We will stand up … like we have never stood up before.”

The idea of democracy promotion, traditionally a cornerstone of US foreign policy, is now being given a go-by. As per Trump’s ‘America First’ approach, the US is more likely to “demand fair and reciprocal economic relationships around the world”. The economic piece gets much more attention. Tough action against China is expected in the coming week, with suggestions that the Trump administration could apply new punitive tariffs on goods from the country, even as an investigation into China’s intellectual property theft and forced technology transfer policies is nearing completion. There is a new-found emphasis on the importance of US intellectual property and the NSS introduces the idea of a “national security innovation base” comprising everything from academia to tech companies. It declares, “The genius of creative Americans, and the free system that enables them, is critical to American security and prosperity.”

Climate change too has been jettisoned as a national security priority, something which was expected after Trump pulled the US out of the Paris climate accord in June. This despite the fact that Trump has signed off on the 2018 defence spending Bill that states, “Climate change is a direct threat to the national security of the United States.”

Yet, the global multilateral order has not been completely ignored as the “economic system continues to serve our interests”, according to the NSS, though “it must be reformed to help American workers prosper, protect our innovation, and reflect the principles upon which that system was founded”. There is still an expectation that “trading partners and international institutions can do more to address trade imbalances and adhere to and enforce the rules of the order”. The need for greater cooperation with allies and partners in tackling China on the economic front has been articulated. The isolationist sentiment engendered by the campaign rhetoric of Trump has given way to a more nuanced understanding of the reality confronting a major power in the 21st century.

Even in a document that is cast in such stark terms, the treatment of India stands out. Seeking to support “India’s emergence as a leading global power”, the NSS calls for increasing “quadrilateral cooperation with Japan, Australia, and India”. It is tough on Pakistan, calling on it to desist from engaging in “destabilizing behavior” in Afghanistan as well as to end its “support for militants and terrorists” targeting American interests in the region. Once again, the Trump administration is signalling to Pakistan that Rawalpindi is on notice as “no partnership can survive a country’s support for militants and terrorists who target a partner’s own service members and officials”.

In his speech unveiling the new NSS, Trump underlined that “America is in the game and America is going to win”. But it will be some time before the implications of this new strategy are clear. Despite the ambitious rhetoric of the new strategy, there is a stark imbalance between the ends, ways and means in the document. And soon, the new document will have to come to terms with the real world where many of the ideas articulated may be found wanting. The world, therefore, will be watching the Trump administration’s actions more closely than it will read the new NSS.

This article originally appeared in Live Mint.

Confronting Asia’s Demographic Demons – Analysis

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By Robert C. Thomas

If demography is indeed destiny, the future of Asia looks troubled. A gruesome New York Times report recently threw the spotlight back onto the continuing plight of the Rohingya ethnic minority in Myanmar, a crisis that has struggled for consistent coverage amid a swath of recent global conflicts and disasters. The horrific stories of violence that the report detailed provided a more grimly intimate portrait than any broader facts or figures could on their own.

Unfortunately, this most recent flashpoint is just one manifestation of an even broader problem. Struggles to successfully manage cultural and ethnic diversity continue to plague East and Southeast Asia more broadly. Should additional shocks from warfare or climate change spark other (and perhaps larger) population flows in the region, it may exacerbate a range of existing economic, political, and security challenges.

Myanmar itself is an example of how bad things can get when intergroup tensions come to a boil. Since late August, members of Myanmar’s long-persecuted Rohingya minority have faced an explosion of violent repression that began as an aggressive crackdown in response to militant attacks on the police (which were, in turn, ostensibly motivated by past police repression). Myanmar’s vaunted political icon, Aung San Suu Kyi, has seen her global reputation harmed over her apparent unwillingness to take a stand in support of the Rohingya. The roots of the crisis are complicated by the fact that Myanmar’s government insists that the Rohingya are not actually citizens but instead illegal immigrants from Bangladesh, whose government also denies their citizenship. Even so, hundreds of thousands of the Rohingya have fled to squalid refugee camps in Bangladesh, where local poverty and government red tape have cut them off from adequate support. Ironically, the latest violence against them seems to seriously have bolstered Rohingya support for the very militant group whose attacks sparked the retaliation.

The fires in Myanmar are burning hot, but the region’s struggle with diversity has a cold side as well. In the face of refugee crises in Myanmar and in the Middle East, no less a regional leader than Japan has been widely criticized for taking in a mere three refugees in the first half of this year. This might seem out of place for a nation that prioritizes international aid as a policy tool in its post-war pacifist constitution. In fact, Japan’s wariness of integrating newcomers remains a prominent feature of the country’s political climate. This is true despite the fact that Japan faces a worsening demographic crisis with an aging and shrinking labor force. This preference for maintaining homogeneity over diversity has held strong even when pitted against the demands of both humanitarianism and self-interest.

Meanwhile, the region’s giant faces a very different kind of struggle with diversity. Fearful of domestic separatism and unrest, Chinese leaders have taken an aggressive approach to dealing with the ethnically and culturally distinct populations of regions such as Tibet and Xinjiang. The Tibetans and the Uyghurs of Xinjiang have seen their communities transformed by ethnic Han Chinese migrants, tourists, and development projects directed from Beijing, while Chinese leaders increasingly repress Tibetan and Uyghur cultural and religious practices. Rather than working to encourage these populations to see themselves as equal stakeholders in the project of the Chinese state, policymakers seem intent on controlling and repressing them as tightly as possible.

This regional pattern of discomfort with demographic diversity may be at least partly due to the lingering challenges of adapting to originally foreign political norms. Like their counterparts in the Middle East, the people and institutions of East and Southeast Asia have spent the last few generations adapting to borders, laws, and political models that were partly injected into their region from the outside. The scars of colonialism and the legal and political ideals of Europe have both left their mark, but evaluating the impact of the past must not stop policymakers from also assessing the challenges of the present and future.

By continuing their current course, Chinese leaders risk further harming, inflaming, and radicalizing entire swaths of their own population at home while further damaging their credibility and soft power abroad. Japanese voters and policymakers continue to resist taking a clear look at how to manage one of the only plausible paths away from the demographic cliff that they are currently hurtling towards. The military officials and politicians of Myanmar are watching as outside faith in their domestic reforms and democratic transition is swiftly replaced by horror and revulsion at mounting crimes against humanity, while their own ethnic and political divisions begin congealing into a recipe for long-term insurgencies.

Left unaddressed, this pattern of inability or unwillingness to deal with demographic diversity and movement is likely to remain one of the greatest threats to peace, prosperity, and stability in the region. There is plenty of debate to be had over how much this is driven by deeper concerns over national identity or by the tensions surrounding more mundane political challenges, but governments in the region continue to struggle with the integration and political representation of demographic minorities. Whatever the relative sources of the problem, these demographic issues will likely continue to bedevil states in East and Southeast Asia just as seriously as those in Europe today.

As is the case more often than cynics care to admit, the demands of morality and the demands of strategy are pulling in the same direction. Both regional policymakers and others with a stake in Asia’s future should focus on building better ways to integrate diverse communities of minorities and immigrants into the region’s economic and political institutions. If they fail to do so, the catastrophe facing the Rohingya of Myanmar may be only the tip of the iceberg for a dark future in the region.

 

The opinions, beliefs, and viewpoints expressed by the authors are theirs alone and don’t reflect any official position of Geopoliticalmonitor.com.

The importance Of Robot iCub As Standard Robotic Research Platform For Embodied AI

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Robotic research benefited in the last ten years of a standardized common open-source platform for research on embodied artificial intelligence (AI): the humanoid robot iCub. Born in Italy, today it is available in 36 copies in laboratories across Europe, USA, South Korea, Singapore and Japan and more than hundred researchers worldwide contribute to develop its skills. Researchers at IIT-Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia coordinating this effort, focused on the importance of such a research platform in a paper published today on Science Robotics, special issue about humanoid robotics.

“iCub: the not-yet finished story of building a robot child” (Natale et al.) is a review of the evolution of the iCub robot from its origin to date. It shows the co-evolution of hardware and software according to research needs, and highlights the benefit for roboticists, namely, reusing and improving the results of one another towards the goal of creating machines that are more intelligent.

iCub was born in 2004, as part of an European project coordinated by IIT and its design has been changing in three different versions (iCub 1.0, iCub 2.0 and iCub 3.0) integrating state of the art robotics research results. Research activities explored the whole spectrum of AI-related areas, ranging from control to machine learning, human-robot interaction, and language acquisition.

“In our review paper, we underline what we learnt so far by working on building a community of Open Source roboticists. The first take-home message is that researchers needed a standard platform for research in humanoid robotics. Reusing software created by others, replicating experiments, and benchmarking are important elements of robotics research. The standard platform is the enabler” said Giorgio Metta, Vice Scientific Director at IIT-Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia and coordinator of the iCub Facility. “The second take-home message is that hardware and software co-evolution is fundamental to keep both at the state-of-the-art”.

The current humanoid has the size of a 5-year-old child (104 cm tall, 29 kg weight), which is able to crawl on all fours, sit-up, balance walk, interact physically with the environment and recognize objects. It is one of the few robots in the world with a sensitive full-body electronic skin system to provide the sense of “touch”.

The first iCub design (iCub 1.0) focused on the hands and their manipulation skills. The second version (iCub 2.0) targeted whole-body control: legs included series elastic actuators and larger feet to improve walking stability; stereoscopic vision and feaster eye and head movement allow better visual perception of the world; the skin system was integrated, providing the iCub with more than 4000 conformable sensors. This version allowed investigating human-robot interaction (HRI) in terms of joint-attention in the form of gaze-cueing effects, and to develop whole-body controllers, which enabled the robot to interact physically with environment in tasks such as balancing, getting up, push and recovery, and walking. The third and most recent version of iCub (iCub 3.0) further improved the legs to generate more natural steps and integrated two-event driven cameras to optimize vision and object recognition.

“iCub version 3.0 is in the making, but we are planning yet another revision originated from requests to use the robot in the clinical setting, in particular, to design HRI experiments and training for children diagnosed with Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD). Here we need robustness because of the expected continuous physical interaction with children. Hence, we are designing new simpler hands and a user-friendly interface for therapist to set up experiments” added Giorgio Metta.

During the development of the iCub, the software evolved as well. Presently, its middleware, YARP, consists of about 400.000 lines of code, providing the basic robot interfaces and reaching as far as kinematics, dynamics and vision libraries. The repositories amount to more than 4 million lines of code. In the past year, more than 160 developers actively contributed by writing new code, debugging and producing new complex experiments using the iCub. This makes the iCub project one of the largest open-source teams in the world.


New Marker May Detect Fatal Breast Cancer Up To One Year Earlier Than Current Methods

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A new marker that could be used to diagnose fatal breast cancer up to one year ahead of current methods has been described in a study published in the open access journal Genome Medicine this week. A team of researchers led by University College London, UK found that a region of DNA called EFC#93 showed abnormal patterns of DNA methylation in breast cancer samples. Importantly, these patterns are present in blood serum before the cancer becomes detectable in the breast.

Professor Martin Widschwendter, corresponding author of the study, said: “For the first time, our study provides evidence that serum DNA methylation markers such as EFC#93 provide a highly specific indicator that could diagnose fatal breast cancers up to one year in advance of current diagnosis. This may enable individualized treatment, which could even begin in the absence of radiological evidence in the breast.”

Professor Widschwendter added: “We found that the presence of EFC#93 DNA methylation in blood serum correctly identified 43% of women who went on to be diagnosed with fatal breast cancer within three to six months of giving serum samples, as well as 25% of women who went on to be diagnosed within six to twelve months of giving samples.”

DNA methylation is the addition of a methyl group to DNA, which often affects gene expression. Aberrant DNA methylation is common in human tumors and methylation changes occur very early in breast cancer development.

The authors first analyzed EFC#93 DNA methylation in blood serum samples from 419 breast cancer patients taken at two time points: after surgery (before the start of chemotherapy), and after completion of chemotherapy. They demonstrated that aberrant DNA methylation in samples taken before chemotherapy was a marker for poor prognosis independent of the presence of circulating tumor cells (cells that have shed from the primary tumor into the blood or lymphatic system and circulate throughout the body).

To assess whether EFC#93 can diagnose women with a poor prognosis earlier (that is, before the cancer becomes detectable) the authors further analyzed serum samples of 925 healthy women, 229 of whom went on to develop fatal and 231 of whom went on to develop non-fatal breast cancer, within the first three years of donating serum samples.

Professor Widschwendter said: “The serum DNA methylation marker EFC#93 correctly identified 43% of women from serum tested six months in advance of their mammography-based breast cancer diagnosis who later died from the disease (sensitivity for fatal breast cancer) and also identified 88% of women who did not go on to develop breast cancer (specificity).

“Importantly, EFC#93 did not detect non-fatal breast cancers early. In comparison, mammography screening has a specificity of 88-92% but leads to very substantial over-diagnosis, which means that tumors are detected that would never have caused any clinical symptoms. Subject to further study, using cell-free DNA as a marker, as we have done here, is a promising way of avoiding this issue. ”

The authors caution that a lack of appropriate serum samples is a key limitation of this kind of study. Blood samples that are not processed immediately after blood is drawn, or are not collected in special tubes, contain large amounts of normal ‘background’ DNA leaked by white blood cells, which makes it hard to detect small amounts of tumor DNA.

Professor Widschwendter said: “The normal DNA in these samples usually emits a much stronger signal compared with the short fragments of tumor DNA. Yet despite the massive contamination of our population-based samples with normal DNA, we were able to observe a clear tumor DNA signal.”

According to the authors, clinical trials are now required to assess whether EFC#93 positive women, who do not have cancer that is detectable by mammography, would benefit from anti-hormonal therapy before the cancer becomes visible in the breast. Professor Widschwendter’s team is currently preparing a large scale population-based cell-free DNA research program which will also help to address this question.

Study Confirms Beauty Is In The Eye Of The Beer Holder

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Popular songs and barstool philosophers have long observed how, after a few drinks, guys often change how they look at women around them.

University of Nebraska-Lincoln psychology researchers used eye-tracking technology to investigate alcohol’s influence on when college-age men drop their gaze from a woman’s face to other parts of her anatomy.

In a newly published study, they confirmed that intoxicated participants do spend significantly less time examining women’s faces compared to sober participants. Their study also showed that intoxicated men were more likely to “check out” the body parts of women they perceived as unfriendly or unintelligent.

“Intoxicated men in the study were less likely to objectify women they perceived as warm and competent and those who were of average attractiveness,” said Abbey Riemer, a doctoral student in psychology and lead author of the study. “Perhaps this is because warmth and competence are humanizing attributes that create a buffer against objectification.”

Although the study was small, involving 49 college-age men, it could offer insights on how to prevent sexually aggressive behavior, particularly in situations where alcohol is being used, said Riemer and her co-authors, Sarah Gervais and David DiLillo, psychology faculty at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln. Party culture often is an element of sexual misconduct issues faced on college campuses – and alcohol use may well have been a factor in many of the sexual harassment and sexual assault incidents recently brought to light as a result of the “Me, Too” social media movement.

The study tested how “alcohol myopia” – a theory that intoxication limits the amount of information people can process, narrowing their perceptions to the most provoking stimuli – interrelates with sexual objectification.

Study participants ranged in age from 21 to 27 years old. More than three-fourths were white. Upon arrival at the laboratory, some participants were randomly assigned to drink a mixture of orange juice and grain alcohol until they reached legal intoxication levels. Other participants were given drinks that smelled and tasted of alcohol, but contained a trivial amount of liquor – too little to make them drunk.

The researchers used eye-tracking equipment to measure whether participants looked at faces or chests or waists as they viewed photographs of 80 college-age women dressed to go out to a party or a bar. The photos previously had been screened by more than 300 men and women who rated the images based upon whether the women appeared attractive, warm or competent. Each image was categorized by high, average and low levels of each attribute.

The researchers stressed that the participants’ responses were based purely upon their perceptions of images — not actual traits or behavior by the women pictured.

“We need to be clear – this is all happening in men’s minds,” Riemer said.

When participants were asked to focus on the pictured women’s appearance, they were more likely to use what researchers call an “objectifying gaze” – spending more time looking at sexual body parts and less time looking at the face.

The study provides objective evidence of previous findings by Gervais and DiLillo, who found that men self-reported that they were more likely to look at women as sexual objects after drinking.

But Gervais said the new study creates a more nuanced view of the notion of “beer goggles.” It wasn’t that participants found more women to be attractive after consuming alcohol.

“But when women don’t appear friendly, intoxicated men will spend less time looking at their faces and more time looking at their sexual body parts,” she said. “When women aren’t perceived as intelligent, intoxicated men will spend less time looking at faces and more time looking at sexual body parts.”

Discovered 4,000-Year-Old Military Network In Northern Syria

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The discovery of more than a thousand sites in Syria has revised our understanding of the settlement of the steppes during all periods in the history of the Near East. Recently, analysis of aerial and satellite images has enabled the discovery of a vast structured surveillance and communication network dating from the Middle Bronze Age (2nd millennium BCE).

This research, led by researchers from the Archéorient laboratory (Environnements et sociétés de l’Orient ancien – CNRS/Université Lumière Lyon 2) and the Directorate-General of Antiquities and Museums of Syria, was published in the journal Paléorient on December 19, 2017.

The region explored by the Franco-Syrian mission “Marges arides de Syrie du Nord” is located to the east of Hama and extends across approximately 7,000 km2. Positioned at the threshold of the densely populated sedentary regions of the Fertile Crescent to the west, and the arid, nomad-inhabited steppes to the east, it has not been continuously exploited by the region’s inhabitants. Here, the multidisciplinary team from the geo-archaeological mission has discovered particularly well-preserved sites, including a fortified surveillance network over the territory dating from the second millennium (-2,000 to -1,550). It is the first time that such an extensive fortified system has been discovered in the territory.

This structure, exceptional in its extent and designed to protect urban areas and their hinterlands, is composed of a series of fortresses, small forts, towers, and enclosures that run along the mountainous ridge which dominates the steppes of central Syria. The researchers’ work suggests that the fortresses were made from large blocks on unsculpted basalt and formed walls several meters wide and high. In addition, each fortified site was positioned in such a way to ensure that it could see and be seen by others. The spatial organization of this network thus depended on the ability to communicate through light (or smoke) signals in order to rapidly convey information to the major centers of power. The purpose of this regional network would have been to defend the territory, to surveil and protect transport corridors and, above all, to protect the most attractive lands.

These results consolidate field observations conducted prior to the exploration. These had already enabled the sites to be dated using ceramics collected on site. The access to aerial and satellite observations, from 1960 to the present day, made it possible to reconstruct the network beyond the limits of the zone under exploration. It has thus been identified across a north-south distance of around 150 km.

Hotter Temperatures To Accelerate Migration Of Asylum-Seekers To Europe

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New research predicts that migrants applying for asylum in the European Union will nearly triple over the average of the last 15 years by 2100 if carbon emissions continue on their current path. The study suggests that cutting emissions could partially stem the tide, but even under an optimistic scenario, Europe could see asylum applications rise by at least a quarter. The study appears today in the journal Science.

“Europe is already conflicted about how many refugees to admit,” said the study’s senior author, Wolfram Schlenker, an economist at Columbia University’s School of International and Public Affairs (SIPA) and a professor at the university’s Earth Institute. “Though poorer countries in hotter regions are most vulnerable to climate change, our findings highlight the extent to which countries are interlinked, and Europe will see increasing numbers of desperate people fleeing their home countries.”

Schlenker and study coauthor Anouch Missirian, a Ph.D. candidate at SIPA, compared asylum applications to the EU filed from 103 countries between 2000 and 2014, with temperature variations in the applicants’ home countries. They found that the more temperatures over each country’s agricultural region deviated from 20 degrees Celsius (68 degrees Fahrenheit) during its growing season, the more likely people were to seek refuge abroad. Crops grow best at an average temperature of 20 degrees C, and so not surprisingly, hotter than normal temperatures increased asylum applications in hotter places, such as Iraq and Pakistan, and lowered them in colder places such as Serbia and Peru.

Combining the asylum-application data with projections of future warming, the researchers found that an increase of average global temperatures of 1.8 °C — an optimistic scenario in which carbon emissions flatten globally in the next few decades and then decline — would increase applications by 28 percent by 2100, translating into 98,000 extra applications to the EU each year. If carbon emissions continue on their current trajectory, with global temperatures rising by 2.6 C to 4.8°C by 2100, applications could increase by 188 percent, leading to an extra 660,000 applications filed each year.

Under the landmark climate deal struck in Paris in 2015, most of the world’s nations agreed to cut carbon emissions to limit warming by 2100 to 2°C above pre-industrial levels. President Trump’s recent decision to withdraw the United States, the world’s second largest carbon emitter, from the accord now jeopardizes that goal.

In a further setback to reducing U.S. carbon emissions, the U.S Environmental Protection Agency has proposed lowering the U.S. government’s “social cost” of carbon, or the estimated cost of sea-level rise, lower crop yields, and other climate-change related economic damages, from $42 per ton by 2020 to a low of $1 per ton. The EPA partly arrived at the lower figure by excluding the cost of U.S. emissions on other countries, yet as the study shows, effects in developing countries have clear spillovers on developed countries. “In the end, a failure to plan adequately for climate change by taking the full cost of carbon dioxide emissions into account will prove far more costly,” said Missirian, a fourth-year sustainable development major.

The research adds to a growing body of evidence that weather shocks can destabilize societies, stoke conflict and force people to flee their home countries. In a widely-cited 2011 study in Nature, a team of researchers led by Solomon Hsiang, then a graduate student at SIPA, linked modern El Niño drought cycles to increased violence and war globally.

More recently, researchers have highlighted the connection between the drying of the Middle East and ongoing conflict there. In a 2015 study in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, another team of Columbia researchers made the case that climate change made Syria’s 2006-2010 drought two to three times more likely, and that the drought was a catalyst for Syria’s 2011 uprising. The civil war that followed has so far claimed 500,000 lives, by one estimate, and forced 5.4 million Syrians to flee the country.

Germany has taken in the largest share of asylum-seekers from Syria and elsewhere, but increasingly faces a backlash from German voters worried about assimilation and loss of jobs. A wave of anti-immigrant sentiment elsewhere in Europe has led to Hungary building a wall to keep refugees out and influenced Great Britain’s decision to leave the European Union. In the United States, President Trump was elected in part on his promise to build a wall to block Mexican immigrants from entering the country illegally.

Hsiang, now an economics professor at the University of California, Berkeley, who was not involved in the research, called the study an “incredibly important” wakeup call. “We will need to build new institutions and systems to manage this steady flow of asylum seekers,” he said. “As we have seen from recent experience in Europe, there are tremendous costs, both for refugees and their hosts, when we are caught flat footed. We should plan ahead and prepare.”

Colin Kelley, a climate scientist at Columbia’s International Research Institute for Climate and Society who linked climate change to Syria’s ongoing conflict, also praised the research. “It’s unclear how much more warming will occur between now and the end of the century, but the study clearly demonstrates just how much climate change acts as a threat multiplier. Wealthier countries can expect to feel the direct and indirect effects of weather shocks from manmade climate change in poorer, less resilient countries.”

The research was initiated at the request of the European Commission’s Joint Research Centre (JRC), which also provided funding. “These findings will be especially important to policymakers since they show that climate impacts can go beyond the borders of a single country by possibly driving higher migration flows,” said Juan-Carlos Ciscar, a senior expert at the JRC’s Economics of Climate Change, Energy and Transport Unit. “Further research should look at ways for developing countries to adapt their agricultural practices to climate change.”

Pakistan: Second Church Attacked By Armed Mob In Punjab

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By Kamran Chaudhry

Another Church has been attacked in Pakistan, this time by a violent mob amid escalating pre-Christmas tensions.

More than 50 armed men stormed St. Paul’s Catholic Church on the night of Dec. 19 night in Sambrial Town of Sialkot district in Punjab Province.

The assailants fired shots into the air and entered the church compound, pulling off its plaque and damaging a window.

Parish priest Father Victor Sawera filed a complaint with police.

According to the priest, the mob was led by Asadullah Randhawa from the purportedly centrist Tehreek-e-Insaf political party of retired Pakistani Muslim cricketer Imran Khan.

Fr. Sawera said some Protestant pastors were trying to apply political pressure to be able to use Catholic premises for small religious gatherings.

“This is our internal matter and Muslims should not get involved,” said Fr. Sawera, who has been negotiating with Protestants over the disagreement since his transfer to the parish in July.

Desperate pastors were now trying to close the church, he added.

Fr. Sawera expressed concern for the safety of worshippers in the wake of the Dec. 17 suicide bombing at the Bethel Memorial Methodist Church in Quetta, the capital of Balochistan Province.

Nine, worshipers were killed, including three women, and 57 injured.

So-called Islamic State (IS) terrorists claimed responsibility for the attack.

Church security volunteers in Punjab province have been urged to keep licensed firearms at hand during Christmas services.

“We have a team of security volunteers, but they will not be on duty at Christmas,” Fr. Sawera said.

“I do not want another conflict between locals. We shall get a court stay and try to resolve the matter peacefully.”

According to media reports, 16 Churches have been attacked by terrorists and violent mobs in Punjab Province since 1997.

This April, the army arrested then released an alleged female suicide bomber planning to attack a Church in Lahore over Easter.

Rwadari Tehreek, a social interfaith movement, has urged government officials to take tough action against terrorists and militant outfits.

The Christian Chairman of Rwadari Tehreek, Samson Salamat, and the Muslim Vice Chairman, Deedar Ahmed Mirani, called for specific measures to combat the financing of terrorist organizations.

And a joint statement sought the destruction of hideouts and training centers used by militants as well as restrictions on their recruiting activities at educational institutions.

And those engaged in “hate speech” should be arrested, the interfaith group said.

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