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Israel Prepares To Intercept Gaza Flotilla

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Israeli naval forces are preparing to intercept the Gaza-bound Freedom Flotilla III which is expected to arrive in Gaza on Monday, Israeli media reported Sunday.

The Hebrew-language news source nrg.co.il reported that Israel’s navy will deploy the “Shayetet 13″ naval special forces unit onto the ships if necessary, and if activists on the ships “were violent.”

Activists on board the flotilla sailing towards Gaza to challenge Israel’s blockade of the strip are quickly nearing their destination but expect to be intercepted, an Israeli television journalist with them reported late Sunday.

“We have been at sea for three days and we are at a distance of no more than 200 kilometers (125 miles) from the Gaza Strip,” Channel Two’s Ohad Hemo said in a broadcast from the deck of the Swedish-flagged Marianne of Gothenburg.

“It’s not clear when we’ll arrive. Will we wait for the other three boats that are behind us or try to break through to the Gaza Strip first,” Hemo reported.

An Israeli army spokesperson told Ma’an they weren’t able to elaborate on possible preparations being taken by the Israeli naval forces in anticipation for the flotilla’s arrival.

The Freedom Flotilla is the third of its kind to attempt to break the nearly nine-year Israeli blockade of Gaza that has left its 1.8 million residents in what rights organizations have termed a humanitarian crisis.

In May 2010, Israeli forces staged a raid on a six-ship flotilla which ended in bloodshed, claiming the lives of 10 Turkish rights activists.

UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said last week he believed “a flotilla will not help to address the dire situation in Gaza,” but reiterated his call on Israel to “lift all closures, with due consideration of Israel’s legitimate security concerns.”

The first of four vessels from the Freedom Flotilla III set sail for Gaza from the Greek island of Crete overnight Thursday of last week, carrying 70 rights activists, journalists and politicians, together with a cargo of humanitarian aid, solar panels, and medical aid.

The crew includes Palestinian member of Israeli parliament Basel Ghattas, Tunisia’s former president Moncef Marzouki and at least one European lawmaker.

Hemo said that the passengers on the vessel get twice daily briefings from the organizers on non-violent resistance to the Israeli commandos they expect to board the boat sooner or later.

“We have seen on the sonar an unidentified vessel following us at a distance of about 20 (nautical) miles and the assumption is that it is an (Israeli) naval ship,” he said.

“It is clear to everyone that commandos will board somewhere before entry to Gaza,” he added.

The Israeli government on Sunday published a letter which will be handed to flotilla participants once they are in Israeli hands.

“If and when they reach Israel they will get a nice letter,” foreign ministry spokesman Emmanuel Nahshon told AFP.

“Welcome to Israel!” said a Hebrew-language text of the message seen by AFP which will be given to the activists in English.

“It looks as if you lost your way,” it continues.

“Perhaps you intended to sail to a place not far from here; Syria where (President Bashar) Assad’s regime is every day massacring his people, supported by Iran’s murderous regime.”

The post Israel Prepares To Intercept Gaza Flotilla appeared first on Eurasia Review.


Iran Nuclear Talks To Continue Past June 30 Deadline

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(RFE/RL) — A senior U.S. official said Iran nuclear negotiations will go past the June 30 deadline.

“We’ve said that these talks could go beyond June 30th for a few days if we need some additional time,” the official told reporters on condition of anonymity on June 28.

U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry and the foreign ministers of Iran, Britain, France, and Germany are attending the Vienna talks, along with officials from China and Russia.

The goal of the talks is an agreement under which Tehran would curb its nuclear program in exchange for sanctions relief.

The six powers want limits on Tehran’s programs that could have a military use. Tehran denies it is pursuing such weapons.

Iranian media reported that Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif would return to Tehran later on June 28 for consultation.

The U.S. official said Washington wasn’t concerned about Zarif decision to return to Tehran overnight, saying it was always expected that ministers would come and go from Vienna as the nuclear talks heated up.

The post Iran Nuclear Talks To Continue Past June 30 Deadline appeared first on Eurasia Review.

South Africa: 38 People Receive Conflict Resolution Training

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Thirty-eight South Africans have completed training in specialised conflict resolution, negotiation and mediation from world experts as part of the Capacity Building and Training Programme in Mediation for South African Youth.

“Accordingly, the main motive for this capacity building programme is to capacitate our youth with conflict resolution, mediation and negotiation skills so that they can contribute to the African Union call of silencing the guns by 2020,” Deputy Minister in the Presidency responsible for Planning, Monitoring and Evaluation, Youth Development and Administration, Buti Manamela, said on Friday.

As part of the Youth Month celebrations, the Department of International Relations and Cooperation (DIRCO) in partnership with the National Youth Development Agency (NYDA) and the South African Youth Council (SAYC) hosted a training programme from 15 to 26 June 2015.

The programme, which formed part of government’s national Youth Month calendar, is designed to promote national peace, stability and nation-building.

The programme also aims to create a caliber of youth who are trained and ready to be deployed on all missions of national and international conflict resolution.

“This is part of the effort to ensure that Africa emerges as a peaceful and secure continent by 2063.

“Our continent does not need young people who can operate an AK-47,” Deputy Minister Manamela said.

He said the continent needs young people who can mediate, negotiate and find peaceful resolutions to the intractable conflicts.

“Imagine the possibilities of a peaceful, united, prosperous Africa. Now imagine your role in bringing this to reality,” Deputy Minister Manamela said.

The young people who participated in the training were selected from civil society and the Security Cluster.

The training programme covered amongst others the context, history and analysis of the changing nature of conflict as well as leadership and the role of youth in changing societies.

Other subjects covered in the training included mediation structures at national, regional and international levels as well as international negotiations and mediation strategy, planning and process design.

“I hope that DIRCO, SAYC and the NYDA will make this an annual training programme so that many more young South Africans can benefit,” he said.

The post South Africa: 38 People Receive Conflict Resolution Training appeared first on Eurasia Review.

Sri Lanka: Air Force Declares General Amnesty For Deserters

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The Sri Lanka Air Force has declared a general amnesty period for absentees, enabling them to receive their legal discharge from the Air Force.

The amnesty period is offered for Airmen and Airwomen who have deserted the Air Force during the period from June 1, 2009 to December 31, 2014.

According to the government, the amnesty period will start July 1. Deserters are required to report to Air Force Headquarters Colombo from 9:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m. for their clearance formalities.

The post Sri Lanka: Air Force Declares General Amnesty For Deserters appeared first on Eurasia Review.

Burma: Disappointment After Constitution Change Vote Fails – OpEd

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By Michele Penna

“I am not happy about it, I want the Constitution to be changed and Aung San Suu Kyi to become president. But I do not think they will change it before the elections.”

Zaw’s mood reflects how Yangonites took yesterday’s vote in the Burmese parliament that failed to remove the army’s veto over constitutional change: with a mixture of disappointment and stoicism. The latter, no doubt, stems from the fact that nearly everyone knew parliament would not amend the Constitution before this autumn’s elections – and plenty believe it won’t after the electoral contest, either.

“Most people want to change the Constitution, but I think for this year it will not be modified,” argued one middle aged man.

The vote cast on Thursday, June 25, concerned six proposed amendments to the current constitutional text. The debate, however, focused on two key norms. One is a section 59 (f) which maintains that anyone who is married to a foreigner or has foreign offspring cannot run for either president or vice-president. This piece of legislation effectively prevents Aung San Suu Kyi, whose children are British, from getting the top spot in any electoral competition.

The other norm under fire is clause 436, which establishes that the Constitution can be amended only with a majority of 75 percent of votes. According to the 2008 Constitution, the armed forces are automatically allotted 25 percent of the seats in Parliament, which ensures they de facto have a veto over any reform – and yesterday’s vote confirmed that they do not intend to give it up anytime soon.

Mon Mon Myat, the executive director of the Human Rights Human Dignity International Film Festival which was held last week in Yangon, said she is not surprised at the results.

“You need 75 percent of the votes to change the text. Some people had hoped that military MPs who want reform would vote in favor of changes, but they were dreaming,” she told Asian Correspondent.

Even Aung San Suu Kyi, who was at the center of yesterday’s vote, was unshaken. “It is not a strange result,” the Lady contended after the vote was cast. “It’s nothing special to be surprised about.” One positive outcome, Suu Kyi noted, is that people would now know who to vote for in the upcoming elections.

Many expect the National League for Democracy (NLD) to do well, but many equally believe that only a landslide victory could give them the political weight necessary to truly shake the current political system.

Such a triumph – akin to the one the NLD achieved in 1990, when they obtained 82 percent of the seats in Parliament in an election whose results were subsequently ignored – may not necessarily be at hand, particularly as tensions between the Buddhist and Muslim communities over the Rohingya issue are denting the NLD popularity.

A few days ago, Bhaddamta Vimala, the secretary of Ma Ba Tha, Burma’s best-known radical Buddhist group, openly called for supporters to vote for the Union Solidarity and Development Party (USDP), which is currently in power.

“We all should forget the bad that they have done in the past. They are doing good things for us now. We should support them now,” he said, according to the Irrawaddy. “I want this government to have one more term to run this country because I do not want our immature democracy to be damaged.”

The post Burma: Disappointment After Constitution Change Vote Fails – OpEd appeared first on Eurasia Review.

Carter Praises US Troops In Germany For Deterring Aggression

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US Defense Secretary Ash Carter thanked US troops stationed at Grafenwoehr, Germany, and told them their presence is important to the way of life that people in America and in Europe enjoy.

“You are deterring aggression. You’re preparing to respond to crises. You’re preparing to deal with terrorism,” the secretary said. “And this is necessary in order for civilized society to exist. And we do it with our colleagues here in Europe, because by and large, they see things the way we do. They share a lot of the same values that we have.”

A year ago, Carter noted, the NATO alliance was wondering what it was going to do after Afghanistan. “And in the intervening year,” he added, “we’ve discovered not only one thing to do, but two things to do.”

Russia, ISIL Pose Challenges

NATO is challenged by Russia’s actions and by what the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant means for the alliance’s southern and southeastern flanks and the nations that live there, the secretary told the troops. “And that has reminded this continent of the need for us to work hard to protect our own people,” he said. “It’s not a birthright that you get to live life the way people here in Germany do, the way people do in the United States. We need what we have, which is the finest fighting force the world has ever known.”

Carter told the troops that military leaders and the American people appreciate what they’re doing. “I think, speaking for all of our fellow citizens in the United States, [that we are] deeply grateful to you, proud of you, admiring of you and what you do,” he said.

The men and women serving the nation are “what I wake up for every morning,” Carter said.

“It’s the people in our military that make us great,” he added. “We have great equipment. We have great training and training ranges. And, you know, all that’s true, but at the end of the day, what makes us the best is you.”

Force of the Future

Getting good people to join the military and continue to serve is his most important responsibility, Carter said, “because we have to make the force of the future from the people who are going to be our future, and that’s you.”

During a question-and-answer session that followed his remarks, the secretary said that although he doesn’t foresee an increase in permanent stationing, he does expect to see increases in operational tempo, training tempo and rotational presence for U.S. forces in Europe.

“We need people at home, because they need to be with their families and so forth,” he said. “But we need our military to be familiar with the rest of the world, because that’s where conflicts are. And that’s where we’re going to become engaged. And if you’ve never been here, you’re going to have a big learning curve if we ever deploy you here. And that’s not going to be either fair to you or effective.”

The post Carter Praises US Troops In Germany For Deterring Aggression appeared first on Eurasia Review.

Kuwait Suicide Bomber Identified As Saudi Citizen

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Authorities on Sunday identified the suicide bomber behind an attack on a Shiite mosque that killed 27 people and injured 227 as a Saudi citizen who flew into the Gulf nation just hours before blowing himself up.

The Interior Ministry named the bomber as Fahad Suleiman Abdulmohsen Al-Gabbaa and said he was born in 1992, making him 22 or 23 years old.

It was not immediately known where Al-Gabbaa had arrived from, but the timing of his arrival suggests he had a network already in place in Kuwait. The ministry said it was searching for more partners and aides in this “despicable crime.”

The government-linked Al-Jarida newspaper reported that at least seven suspects have been detained in connection with the attack.

The ministry said the driver of the Japanese-made car, who left the mosque immediately after Friday’s bombing, was an illegal resident named Abdul-Rahman Sabah Aidan, a Bidoon.

Authorities on Saturday arrested the car owner, Jarrah Nimr Mejbil Ghazi, born in 1988, and also listed as a stateless person.

Security services have also detained the owner of the house used as a hideout by the driver, describing the owner as a Kuwaiti national who subscribes to “extremist and deviant ideology”.

The ministry said authorities will “continue efforts to uncover the conspirators in this criminal act and to reveal all of the information and circumstances behind it.”

Mourners turned out in large numbers Saturday despite the Ramadan fast and as temperatures hit 45 degrees Celsius.

“We want to deliver a message to Daesh that we are united brothers among the Sunnis and Shiites, and they cannot divide us,” said Abdulfatah Al-Mutawwia, a Kuwaiti living in Iraq who lost his brother in the bombing.

Officials said the bombing was clearly meant to stir enmity between majority Sunnis and minority Shiites and harm the comparatively harmonious ties between the sects in Kuwait.

Kuwaitis reacted with outrage to the bombing. Some said citizens who fund armed groups fighting in Syria and Iraq were to blame for any militancy in Kuwait.

“The wrath of God will come upon Daesh and everyone who is supporting them and collecting funds for them under the cover of helping refugees and orphans,” wrote Hamad Al-Baghli, a Kuwaiti, on Twitter.

Abdulrahman Al-Jeeran, a parliamentarian, told Reuters lawmakers should stop “sectarian discourse” and be prevented from using sectarian issues for electoral gains.

Kuwait’s Emir Sheikh Sabah Al-Ahmad Al-Sabah instructed authorities Sunday to repair the targeted mosque.

Local media said 18 of those killed were Kuwaitis, three Iranians, two Indians, one each from Pakistan and Saudi Arabia and one Bidoon.

The bodies of the eight victims were flown to Iraq’s city of Najaf for burial.

The post Kuwait Suicide Bomber Identified As Saudi Citizen appeared first on Eurasia Review.

Georgian Church Leader Says US Supreme Court Gay Marriage Ruling ‘Big Mistake’

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(Civil.Ge) — Head of the Georgian Orthodox Church, Patriarch Ilia II, said in his Sunday sermon that the U.S. Supreme Court’s ruling legalizing same-sex marriage throughout the United States was a “big mistake.”

He raised the issue when speaking about freedom in his sermon in the Holy Trinity Cathedral in Tbilisi.

“Freedom has a huge power; freedom is a test in which a person sees spiritually the path,” Patriarch Ilia II said. “Often freedom is misused by people and this is disastrous for spirit. Neither ten commandments, nor laws and customs would have been required if people were given complete freedom.”

“There are cases when people and countries legalize illegality. You know from the media and the press that the United States of America has decided to allow same-sex marriage in all the states – this is a big mistake and even the American spiritual figures say it; and we too reiterate that this is a big mistake,” he said.

“A Georgian should distinguish between good and evil; between acceptable and unacceptable; we ask the god for opening our minds and hearts to let them see good and evil,” he added.

The post Georgian Church Leader Says US Supreme Court Gay Marriage Ruling ‘Big Mistake’ appeared first on Eurasia Review.


China’s Belt And Road Diplomacy – Analysis

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By Rakhahari Chatterji*

The just concluded Third China-South Asia Think-Tank Conference at Kunming, China (12-13 June) marked an important step for China’s forward “Belt and Road’ (BAR) diplomacy. The conference, which coincides with the impressive China and South Asia Expo, is regarded as a major event for the organisers the Yunnan Academy of Social Sciences. This year,. India had a sizeable representation at the Think-Tank Forum. The other countries that were represented from the region were Pakistan, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, Nepal, Myanmar, Maldives and Singapore in addition to a very large representation from different parts of China.

Economic Belt and Silk Road has been a pet idea of Xi Jinping ever since he took over as China’s President. He first mooted the proposal in Kazakhstan in September 2013 and since then he has been discussing, even promoting, the plan in course of his visits to Central and South Asia. The earlier idea of a BCIM-Economic Corridor appears to have been subsumed by it. In this diplomatic blitzkrieg into South Asia, China looks upon the Think-Tanks in the region as important instruments for generating consensus on the issue not only among top-level leaders and policy-makers but also among the common people. China regards the Belt and the Road project as capable of generating common benefits for the whole region so that countries in the region could go forward ‘neck by neck’ in ensuring infrastructure, industries and economic development.

China’s representatives have agreed that BAR is ‘the most complex’ concept that Beijing has ever projected. A lot remains to be done before BAR attains fruition. For instance, the points to be connected on the BCIM route need to be discussed among the countries concerned. The route may have to pass through regions of natural disasters and terrorist activities. The feasibility of the methods will determine the sustainability of the projects to be undertaken. There is also the issue of financial assessment which, if not done in a pragmatic manner, will result in half-finished projects. Raising money for the projects is another vital area of concern. Obviously, funds from the Asian Development Bank will be inadequate. AIIB (China-led Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank) funds as well as market borrowing would have to be accessed. An information data-base through micro-research is imperative.

Representatives of South Asian think-tanks have generally welcomed BAR as a laudable idea even though they have expressed certain apprehensions. A particular cavil was that the idea was both ‘under-explained and oversold’. The Chinese side needed to explain it further. The perspectives of individual countries needed to be understood and appreciated. It was pointed out that the ‘dispute in the South China Sea’ raised the issue of ‘one country doing something not acceptable to another country’ and it was important to know how BAR would deal with similar situations. Some described it as a ‘grand strategy’ and a ‘bold initiative’ though not historically a new concept. It needs to be a ‘shared concept’ taking everybody on board. The concept of “Mausam’, advanced by India and endorsed by a number of South Asian representatives, also calls for reflection.

The general view was that BAR should not be ‘thrust upon’ any country. Some argued there was scope for bringing together the silk route and the spice route.

While Chinese and Pakistani representatives emphasised that the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor was a ‘bilateral issue’, some others, including the Indian think-tank representatives, felt that it raised several controversial issues. Both Chinese and South Asian speakers agreed that to make BAR a success, greater mutual trust was necessary. Although the idea had the potentiality, its effectiveness would depend on how China’s national interest and common interests converge. This is not easy to achieve in an era of nation-states.

Of course, over the past three decades China has strengthened cooperation with South Asian countries. Its bilateral relations in the spheres of energy, transportation and trade have achieved considerable headway in recent times. China’s imports play a beneficial role for the economy of its neighbouring countries. At the same time it cannot be denied that it has registered a downward trend. It is time that China, instead of looking towards the USA and Europe as export targets, should attempt to redirect her exports and infrastructural investment to her Asian neighbours. For China, the significance of the BAR initiative lies in its promise to bolster its own sluggish growth through integrating its domestic economy with that of regional economies. The regional countries will have to carefully scrutinize whether it will be the most efficient way to benefit, keeping both short and long-term interests in mind.

The ancient silk route connected China with Central and Western Europe… up to Rome. The southern silk route and the maritime silk route connected China with South and South-East Asia. These were two-way trade routes which were also used by itinerant pilgrims and religious preachers.

Today, to draw lines on the map along these ancient trade routes and to claim that they marked an exclusive zone of trade and dense economic relationship centering around and led by China will beg a number of questions. Does it mean that countries within the zone will sever their trade and economic relations with countries outside the zone? Would, for instance, China terminate its robust trade relations with the USA which will be outside the zone? If it only means an assertion that countries within the zone will try to develop closer economic relations with each other, then it is redundant because trade relations will develop whenever and wherever there are opportunities. Or does it mean a covert attempt by China to mark a sphere of influence for herself in which case it would be dangerous? The scholars representing the Think-Tanks at the Forum will certainly have to ponder over these issues.

*The writer is an Advisor to Observer Research Foundation, Kolkata Chapter

Courtesy: The Statesman

The post China’s Belt And Road Diplomacy – Analysis appeared first on Eurasia Review.

Israel Under Netanyahu III: International Isolation Or Integration? – OpEd

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In a volatile Middle East, Israel matters greatly. So the path Israel takes – for instance, either caring for international norms or egotistically upholding national security interests – will have profound implications for all major global developments.

By Hriday Ch. Sarma*

Bibi vis-a-vis all political actors in Israel

Benjamin Netanyahu has yet again proven his political acumen by forming a new national government and serving as Israel’s prime minister for a third time in a row. This qualifies Netanyahu as a seasoned and bold politician who has the ability to manoeuvre and adapt to a changed political climate, internally and externally, in order to further the country’s national interests. Defining these national interests, however, is a complicated task given the different groups who have staunchly advocated their own versions. Moreover, each of these versions vary from the various peace plans painstakingly worked-out by various experts and organizations.

The pre-election period witnessed a head-on collision between Netanyahu’s Likud party and the Zionist Union, the main opposition party led by Isaac Herzog and Tzipi Livni. The latter was formed in December 2014 as a merger between the Herzog-led Labour party – a center-left party that has been a recognizable force in the country since its inception in 1965 – and the Livni-led Hatnuah – a party espousing a two-state solution. This new alliance ran almost neck-and-neck with Likud. Moreover, all opposition parties went gung-ho in attacking Netanyahu before the elections, with many attempting to demonize him. Netanyahu, for his part, resorted to a hawkish tactic of inflating the security problems Israel currently faces – internally and externally – in a concerted attempt to entice the electorate. This tactic paid-off, with Netanyahu’s party securing 30 of the 120 seats in the unicameral national legislature. Hence Likud has yet again emerged, despite all the odds, as the single largest party in the Knesset.

The post-election political situation, however, has never prevailed before in the course of Israel’s history. First, the Ayman Odeh led Joint List – a united bloc of three prominent Arab parties (United Arab List, Ta’al, Hadash and Balad) – has emerged as the third largest party in the Knesset; a resounding achievement for Arabs residing in Israel. Any prospective collapse of the reigning government would automatically qualify them as ‘kingmaker’. Second, the right-wing nationalist camp – once considered natural allies – has ceased to remain so. Avigdor Libermann, the former foreign minister of Israel and leader of Yisrael Beytenu, a ultra-ring political party, pulled out of coalition negotiations two days before the final deadline to form a new government. Addressing the media, Libermann cited ideological differences with the coalition and accused the would be government of being one of “opportunism and conformism.” Third, the left parties, led by Zionist Union, are ready to unsettle and depose the new government in the near-future. Amid this prevailing political imbroglio, Netanyahu has set sail his new government, which hinges on a razor-thin majority of 61 Members of the Knesset (MKs) out of 120, raising serious concerns about the new government’s longevity.

Avraham Diskin, a professor (emeritus) at the Hebrew University, has put forth a counter argument to popular criticism against the new Israeli government. Speaking to New York Times, Diskin stated that, “small governments had actually proved stable around the world because members know that anyone who makes too many problems really directs the gun at his own head.  It’s going to be more cohesive than the previous government”.  As per this argument, Netanyahu will reign with relative ease over others in the new government unless he attempts to pass any new legislation that directly impinges on the fundamental values of any coalition parties. Netanyahu will, however, have to frequently face minor challenges from restive individuals and political parties in the coalition, like Naftali Bennett and his religious Zionist political party, HaBayit HaYehudi, and Moshe Kahlon. Netanyahu is, by and large, the decisive factor shaping the internal milieu of Israel and its political-military (dis)-engagements with Palestine.

Externalities affecting Israel’s future trajectory

High-up on the new government’s agenda is the Iran issue; namely, preventing a final agreement between Western powers and Iran over the latter’s controversial nuclear (weapons) program. In April 2015, a historic nuclear framework agreement was reached between six major Western powers, including the US, and Iran that limits the latter’s enrichment capacity and stockpiles, and subjects it to regular inspections, which will reduce the possibility of it developing a nuclear weapon.  In return, the present economic sanctions against Iran will be terminated, on condition that Iran upholds its commitments. A deadline for reaching a final comprehensive agreement between the two parties is scheduled for 30th June – which seems to be softening at the moment as negotiations over technical intricacies continue.

Soli Shahvar, director of Ezri Center for Iran and Persian Gulf Studies in University of Haifa, while corresponding with the author, stated, “one loophole (of the deal) is about the visits of nuclear sites, which the USA says that Iran has committed to allow such visits, while the Iranians openly say that they did not, adding that they require a month’s notice before any visit takes place. One can ask, why they need a month if we are to believe that all their nuclear sites are for civil purposes, unless they want to clear up the site from any evidence that it’s actually for military purposes?!” He further added, “any nuclear deal with the Iranians would bring other countries in the Middle East to enter the nuclear race.”

Hence the new Israeli government, and in particular Netanyahu, will try to do whatever it can in order to change the attitude of the US and other Western countries to either derail or stall further progress on the prospective agreement with Iran. Furthermore, Israel will use its influence within Congress to make sure it rejects the deal. If all these attempts fail to produce a minimally-acceptable result for Israel, then it will not shy from launching a unilateral military mission. Although any such step will draw stern condemnation from different quarters, and might even lead to another war in the Middle East, Israel will do what it feels best for its self-survival.

The second main factor that is determining Israel’s course of activities, both national and foreign, is the durability of its fraternal relationship with the US.  President Barack Obama has long been on poor terms with Netanyahu, condemning the latter’s deeply-divisive politics during the elections. Obama did not immediately call Netanyahu after Likud’s election victory. Moreover, the US has excluded Iran and Lebanese militant group, Hezbollah, from the 2015 “Worldwide Threat Assessment of the U.S. Intelligence Community”, in an attempt to change its foreign policy outlook towards the Middle East. The US is currently re-assessing the underlying basis of its intimate alliance with a Netanyahu-led Israel.  The new Israeli government will, therefore, have to worry about securing the gifts associated with the US’s patronage, like veto immunity for Israel in the UN Security Council and $3.1 billion per year in military aid.

There are certain other external factors – some historical, some recent developments – that the new Israeli government will have to focus on. However, the government may still be able to avoid securitizing these factors in national political discourse in order to concentrate on solving two aforementioned concerns. Daesh (commonly known as Islamic State) is grows stronger by the day, and might in the future attempt to challenge Israel. Russia’s changed role of defending the Shia camp in the Middle East and its open support for Palestinian statehood is stoking conflict with Israel; though both maintains congenial ties at present. The list of such external factors of likely concern to Israel is a long one.

Israel’s near-future rational proposition

Israel does not remain in a vacuum in the present neo-liberal era. It is, in-fact, an integral part of a compact global system that persistently makes cultural, social, political and economic transactions at the micro-, meso- and macro-levels. Netanyahu cannot afford to further polarize Jewish and Arab communes within the country by pursuing steps that appear as apartheid practices from outside – like continuing to build Jewish settlements in East Jerusalem (a Arab-dominated area) and practically rejecting a ‘two-state solution’ while in principle agreeing to it – as this will increase global consternation against his new right-wing government. Even others in this new government – both individuals and political parties – understand the urgency of the situation whereby any local step executed for augmenting sectoral interests might easily translate into a backlash at the global level.

The Vatican recently recognized the state of Palestine in-line with the Holy See’s position – a step not politically motivated – as officially conveyed by Vatican government. The EU is set to vote on labeling goods manufactured in the Golan Heights and Israeli settlements in the West Bank in order not to mislead consumers with false information. An array of Boycott Israel campaigns are gaining momentum, whilst anti-Semitism is reviving in many places. Amid this intense anti-Israel global environment, the new Israeli government will endeavour to assuage the country’s sullying image and integrate with the global community. However, this will still remain a half-hearted attempt on the part of the government as it is a mere continuation of the Netanyahu-centric previous two governments.

In a volatile Middle East, Israel matters greatly. So the path Israel takes – for instance, either caring for international norms or egotistically upholding national security interests – will have profound implications for all major global developments.

*Hriday Ch. Sarma is a PhD Candidate in Energy Studies Program at Jawaharlal Nehru University, India. He is also a Israel analyst.

The post Israel Under Netanyahu III: International Isolation Or Integration? – OpEd appeared first on Eurasia Review.

King Mohammed VI Calls Tunisian President To Express Unity And Solidarity – OpEd

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In a move to show his personal solidarity and that of the Government and people of Morocco with Tunisia, King Mohammed VI spoke with the President of Tunisia, His Excellency Mr Baji Caid Essebi, expressing his sympathy to the people of Tunisia after bloody terrorist attack against the hotel compound in the city of Sousse. In fact, The Moroccan Press Agency MAP reported that King Mohammed VI held on Saturday phone talks with Tunisian president, Beji Caid Essebsi, says a release of the Royal office.

King Mohammed VI reiterated condolences to the Tunisian president following the despicable attacks against hotel compounds in the city of Sousse, according to the release.

HM the King also expressed Morocco’s total solidarity with Tunisia in this ordeal and permanent support to this country to face the appalling plague of terrorism that is contrary to the values of our Islamic religion and the universal human principles, adds the source.

The shootings in the Tunisian resort of Sousse happened at about the same time as a bombing at a Shiite mosque in Kuwait and an attack on a U.S.-owned factory in France that included a beheading. It was unclear if the violence was linked but it came days after the IS militants urged their followers “to make Ramadan a month of calamities for the nonbelievers.” In all, the assailants killed at least 65 people.

The attack in Tunisia, the country’s worst ever, comes just months after the March 18 massacre at the national Bardo museum in Tunis that killed 22 people, again mostly tourists.

The Moroccan monarch’s telling phone conversation with the Tunisian President shows total solidarity with Tunisians following this despicable terrorist act. The Moroccan ministry of Foreign Affairs also issued a statement denouncing this heinous act stating that “The Kingdom of Morocco expresses its solidarity with the sister nation of Tunisia, government and people, following this despicable terrorist act, extends its heartfelt condolences and sincere compassion to the victims’ families, and wishes swift recovery for the injured,” noted the statement.

“Morocco reiterates its continuous support for the sister country of Tunisia against terrorist attacks and attempts to undermine its stability, plunge it into the economic crisis and hamper the development process to which the country committed itself to achieve progress, prosperity and democracy,” it added.

The post King Mohammed VI Calls Tunisian President To Express Unity And Solidarity – OpEd appeared first on Eurasia Review.

Concerns Western Medical Students Left Sudan To Join Islamic State

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Twelve foreign students have reportedly traveled from the Sudanese capital of Khartoum to Turkey in a bid to join the Islamic State militant group in Syria, their university dean says.

Dr Ahmed Babikir said on Sunday that the students of Khartoum’s private University of Medical Sciences and Technology included British, Canadian, Sudanese and US citizens.

He added the students were in their final year of medical school before being reported missing by their families on Friday.

“We confirmed reports from multiple parties that 12 medical students at the university left for Turkey on Friday,” AFP quoted Babikir as saying.

He noted that another group of British students of Sudanese origin from the private institution, who traveled to Turkey in March, is believed to have crossed into Syria to join the militant group.

“Logic says that they traveled to join the Daesh organization,” he added, using the Arabic acronym for ISIL. He said seven of the missing students are British, two are Canadian, one is American and two others are Sudanese nationals.

Babikir also stated that three of the 12 medical students that disappeared were women but refused to identify any of them.

Meanwhile, authorities at Khartoum Airport confirmed the group had traveled to Turkey while their families stated that they had not seen them since Friday and could not locate their passports, according to Babikir.

“These students were recruited to the Islamic State organization by some individuals inside the university through conversations they had with them,” said a source at the private university.

Despite repeated incidents of foreign nationals being recruited and traveling to Syria mostly through Turkey, there has been little effort to halt the steady flow of radicalized militants to Syria to join the notorious militant group.

Syria has been grappling with a deadly crisis fueled by militant groups since March 2011. The conflict has reportedly claimed more than 222,000 lives since then.

Original article

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A Week Of Crisis For Greece And Global Markets – Analysis

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By Zachary Fillingham

After years of false starts it appears that the ‘Grexit’ is finally in motion. Yet when the dust finally settles, this week will be remembered for its market volatility – not as the time when Greece kicked itself out of the euro zone.

Cooler Heads Not Prevailing

Shrewd negotiating is what brought us to this point. Both sides are in a difficult position, and both would rather salt their own fields than be seen as bending to their opponent’s demands.

Luckily it’s not totally up to the politicians. The Greek people are poised to be the ultimate deciders of this latest act of a seemingly unending drama. Early polling shows clear support for accepting the Eurogroup’s offer in the upcoming July 5 referendum. One poll conducted over the weekend by Alco, a Greek newspaper, found 57% in favor of a deal, and another conducted by Kapa Research found 47% in favor and 33% opposed.

As far as Prime Minister Tsipras is concerned it’s a win-win situation, and this is something that has undoubtedly influenced his negotiating style. Many believe that his Syriza party wanted to default and exit the euro zone from the very beginning, though it had to drop this unpopular platform in order to be voted in by a Greek electorate still largely in favor of remaining in the euro zone. Walking away from the table in the early rounds was never an option; Tsipras had to appear like he was negotiating in good faith. But by driving an exceedingly hard bargain on Greece’s bailout conditions, he could either break the cycle of austerity or induce a ‘Grexit’ under circumstances that would rally Greeks against a cruelly vindictive Brussels establishment.

The tone and tempo of the Greek negotiating strategy supports this interpretation. IMF payments were lumped together and pushed back to the end of June, good negotiating time was needlessly wasted, and the first feasible proposal on the part of the Greeks came at the absolute last second. In short, every effort was made to drum up a sense of dire climax, and when it all predictably broke down, Tsipras turned to the Greek electorate to bless either a bad deal or a ruinous exit from the euro zone: win-win for Syriza, lose-lose for Greece.

Not to be so easily outdone, the Eurogroup negotiators have a few tricks of their own. With less than a week to go before a vote that could decide the future of the entire currency union, they played their trump card and withdrew emergency assistance to Greek banks. Now Greeks will have a stark preview of what life might be like should they vote no: empty ATMs, shuttered banks, and a deep and crippling uncertainty over what tomorrow may bring.

A Week on the Edge

We have not yet arrived at the point of no return.

Though there is no more European money to lubricate the Greek financial system, the problem has been temporarily circumvented by the government announcing a bank holiday until July 7 – two days after the referendum. By then it’s likely that the Greek people will have voted to accept the agreement and the gears will be in motion to institute the next round of the bailout.

Greece is required to pay $1.7 billion to the IMF on June 30, several days before the referendum. There have been conflicting reports as to whether or not Athens has the financial assets necessary to make the payment. If not, Greece would technically be classified by the institution as being in arrears, and not having defaulted. Again, Athens would be in a position to resume its payments should the ‘yes’ vote win and the bailout be reinstated.

Nothing conclusive has transpired yet, with everything still hinging on the Friday vote. Yet there is sure to be a black cloud looming over global equity markets all week; this is where we might see the uncertainty that many traders have taken for granted for years begin to have a more palpable impact. Bond markets in peripheral countries such as Portugal, Spain, and Italy merit particular attention. This is the frontline of possible contagion. Should debt yields here spike to unsustainable levels, European leaders will think again about whether the risk of a Greek default is actually firewalled. After all, in terms of investor sentiment, there’s an awful lot riding on just three words from Mario Draghi, words that are increasingly ringing hollow of late: ‘whatever it takes.’

It’s going to be a long week for Greece, Europe, and investors worldwide.

This article was published by Geopolitical Monitor.com

The post A Week Of Crisis For Greece And Global Markets – Analysis appeared first on Eurasia Review.

Saudi-Led Coalition Must Put Boots On Ground In Yemen – OpEd

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It’s been three months since the air campaign against the Hoothis started and the situation in Yemen is rapidly deteriorating. The military situation is at a stalemate at best and the humanitarian situation is entering a disaster zone. Millions of Yemenis are now facing eminent hunger and disease and the death toll is increasing by the minute. The suffering is already unimaginable.

The Saudi-led coalition ought to make a very tough, but crucial decision, to send in foot soldiers before it is too late. As the Americans failed in Iraq, only to leave it in unimaginable cycle of violence that has lasted for more than a decade and getting worse by the day, this coalition is in danger of achieving exactly the same result in Yemen. The courage demonstrated by King Salman in starting the air campaign needs to be taken to another level. The implications of not taking decisive action now are innumerable.

Allowing the war to linger will backfire in more ways than one and will impact all parties involved. Yemen is becoming a chaotic situation that will quickly become an incubator for exporting violence. It is true that Islamic State claimed the recent attacks in Saudi Arabia and the most recent one in Kuwait, however, once violence in other parts of the Gulf ensues, other parties interested in an unstable GCC could utilize the anarchy and indeed use it as cover for their own attacks. Whilet Islamic State and Iran have different objectives, and are indeed staunch enemies, it is safe to argue that Iran cannot be sympathetic to the havoc that ISIS or any other party does within the GCC.

As far as Yemen itself is concerned, if the Saudi-led coalition lacks the courage to intervene now, Yemen risks very rapidly becoming a failed state. All the elements that have made Iraq a failed state are in place in Yemen. The sectarian divide is similar to what is in Iraq and the only difference there is that instead of ISIS there is Al-Qaeda. Another similarity is of course Iran’s meddling. Although Iran is yet to place foot soldiers in Yemen, if the situation is not dealt with swiftly it will definitely enter the Yemen landscape in a more direct fashion. At which point the coalition will be facing a much tougher and complex situation.

The Americans and the Europeans are now becoming seemingly increasingly more confident about their energy security due to fracking technology and alternative means of energy that they will not own conflicts in the Middle East and will not intervene directly especially in these difficult economic times. Apart from Israel’s security, the West is clearly leaving Middle East problems to regional powers. Even if the GCC oil is still as crucial as it once was, the West knows that regional powers will own their own fights due to their almost full dependence on oil exports.

Provided that the resistance on the ground in Yemen is barely managing to keep the Hoothis at bay and there is a real danger for their Iran allies to tip the situation in their favor, even if the coalition decides to send in foot soldiers later on, it will be doing so in a back-footed manner.

In essence, for the very reasons the Americans are unable to re-intervene fully in Iraq, it will be much harder for the coalition to intervene in Yemen if they wait. Each day that passes means further deterioration in Yemen and becomes that much harder to contain. When Saudi Arabia assembled its coalition it must have made the decision to go all the way — and air power alone is hardly going all the way.

If the Hoothis manage to have the upper hand at a future stage, they and Iran will not stop there as they deem the fight against the Kingdom and her allies as an existential one; what were once disagreements in ideology is now a bloody struggle, trust in coexistence is dead. For the GCC, Israel and Iran are the same and vice versa. Shias and Sunnis will not coexist in peace until one side is fully dominant in the region and if the GCC wishes to be the dominant side it needs to take blunt actions very soon.

Thus far many observers have felt that only “groups” like ISIS were interested in a chaotic Middle East, but each day that passes demonstrates that Iran too is of the same inclination. If Saudi Arabia and its allies lose or are unable to contain the Yemeni situation, they will have to face the consequences within their own borders in a much bloodier way. The GCC is more worried about Iran, but Al-Qaeda, Israel and other forces are also interested in a chaotic Gulf and as such losing Yemen could very well reshape the GCC in an irreversible manner fueled by opportunistic parties.

No doubt that sending soldiers into a warzone is highly costly and requires huge sacrifices, but the cost of pacifism could lend the Gulf into a black hole. In Syria, Iran has already demonstrated how far it is willing to go to protect its interests defying international opposition to it and regardless of deaths of hundreds of thousands. If Bahrain for example descends unto sectarian bloodshed there is no reason why Iran won’t intervene with the same zeal as it has in Syria and as it is gradually but steadily doing in Yemen.

The post Saudi-Led Coalition Must Put Boots On Ground In Yemen – OpEd appeared first on Eurasia Review.

Egypt: Top Prosecutor Dies From Injuries Sustained In Bomb Attack

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Egypt’s top prosecutor Hisham Barakat has died from injuries sustained in a bomb attack in Cairo, medical sources confirmed to Ahram Online.

It is the first successful assassination attempt against a state official since an upswing in violence following the ouster of Islamist president Mohamed Morsi in July 2013.

Barakat suffered ruptures to the nose and left shoulder, and internal bleeding in the lungs and stomach, health ministry spokesperson Hossam Abdel-Ghaffar told Ahram Online.

He had been taken to the operating room at Al-Nozha hospital in Heliopolis.

Nine people, including two drivers, one civilian and five members of the security forces, were injured when a bomb hit the prosecutor’s convoy near the military academy in Heliopolis, Abdel-Ghaffar said.

President Abdel-Fattah El-Sisi met with Interior Minister Magdy Abdel-Ghaffar after the attack, where he reported the situation to the president.

El-Sisi urged the ministry to tighten security measures and find the perpetrators of the attack.

Islamist militants, who have primarily targeted security forces since the removal of Morsi, have also attacked several judges.

In May, three judges and their driver were killed when gunmen opened fire on their vehicle in the North Sinai city of Al-Arish.

In March, a small bomb was left in front of the house of judge Fathi Bayoumi, who investigated the corruption charges against Mubarak-era interior minister Habib El-Adly. The words “a gift for El-Adly’s acquittal” were scribbled on a wall near the attack.

In January, a bomb attack targeting judge Khaled Mahgoub, who is acting for the general prosecution in Morsi’s jailbreak trial, caused damage to the windows and walls of his house.

Supporters of the outlawed Muslim Brotherhood accuse Egypt’s judiciary of issuing politicised sentences, including against the group’s supreme guide Mohamed Badie and former president Mohamed Morsi. Both were among tens of the now banned group’s members who have been sentenced to death during the past year.

Barakat was appointed Egypt’s top prosecutor in July 2013 following the resignation of Abdel-Meguid Mahmoud.

Original article

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The Greek Debt Crisis And Crashing Markets – OpEd

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Back in January upon coming into office, Syriza probably could not have won a referendum on whether to pay or not to pay. It didn’t have a full parliamentary majority, and had to rely on a nationalist party for Tsipras to become prime minister. (That party balked at cutting back Greek military spending, which was 3% of GDP, and which the troika had helpfully urged to be cut back in order to balance the government’s budget.)

Seeing how unyielding the opposition was, Syriza’s stance was: “We would like to pay. But there’s no money.”

This kept throwing the ball back into the troika’s court. The Institutions were so unyielding that Syriza’s approval rating in the polls rose by 13% by June. Greek voters became increasingly incensed at the Troika’s demand for further pension cuts and privatizations.

Tsipras and Varoufakis were willing to pay the IMF with the IMF’s own funds, in what V. called “extend and pretend.” But their only interest in keeping current on debt was to obtain additional funding that could be used to pay domestic pensions and other basic government budgetary expenditures.

The basic tactic in such tensions between creditors and debtors is clear: once debt repayments exceed new loans, stop paying.

So when The Institutions made it clear that no more credit would be forthcoming without Syriza adopting the old Pasok/New Democracy capitulation to Troika demands, Tsipras and Varoufakis decided it was time to call a referendum eight days hence, on Sunday, July 5.

Late Friday night and into the early Saturday morning hours, Greeks ran to the ATM machines to convert their checking and savings deposits into euro notes, expecting that the end game would involve a likely 30% depreciation of the drachma – and that indeed, the ECB would stop lending to support Greek banks (the only role the ECB wanted to play).

Syriza had no love for the banks. They were the vehicles through which the oligarchs controlled the Greek economy, after all. For a month, they had been discussing how to separate the banks into “good bank” and “bad bank,” either nationalizing them (wiping out stockholders) or creating a Public Option alternative.

Most important, once out of the eurozone, Greece could create its own Treasury to monetize its spending. The Institutions called this “scrip,” but the Greeks could establish it as their national currency. They would escape from euro-austerity – except, of course, to the extent that the ECB waged economic war on Greece by imposing its own capital controls.

By going through the sham negotiations with The Institutions, Syriza gave Greeks enough time to protect what savings and cash they had – by converting these bank deposits into euro notes, automobiles and “hard assets” (even boats).

Businesses borrowed from local banks where they could, and moved their money into eurozone banks or even better, into dollar and sterling assets. Their intention is to pay back the banks in depreciated drachma, pocketing a 30% capital gain.

What commentators miss is that Syriza (at least its left) wants to be transformative. It wants to free Greece from the post-military oligarchy that evades taxes and monopolizes the economy. And it wants to transform Europe, away from ECB austerity to create a real central bank. In the process, it demands a clean slate of past bad debts. It wants to reject the IMF’s austerity philosophy and refusal to take responsibility for its bad 2010-12 bailout.

This larger, transformative picture is at the center of Syriza-left plans.

I’m in Germany now (on my way to Brussels), and have heard from Germans that the Greeks are lazy and don’t pay taxes. There is little recognition that what they call “the Greeks” are really the oligarchs. They have gained control of the old coalition Pasok/New Democracy parties, avoided paying taxes, avoided being prosecuted (New Democracy refused to act on the “Lagarde List” of tax evaders with nearly 50 billion euros in Swiss bank accounts), orchestrated insider dealings to privatize infrastructure at corrupt prices, and used their banks as vehicles for capital flight and insider lending.

This has turned the banks into vehicles for the oligarchy. They are not public institutions serving the economy, but have starved Greek business for credit.

So one casualty apart from the credibility of the eurozone, the ECB and the IMF will be these banks. Syriza is positioning itself to provide a public option – public banks that will promote the economy, and a national Treasury that will spend government money INTO the economy, not drain it to pay the Troika for having bailed out French and other banks back in 2010-1.

The European popular press is as bad as the U.S. press in describing matters. It warns of “hyperinflation” if a central bank monetizes as much as one euro of government spending in the way that the U.S. Fed does, or the bank of England or any other real central bank. The reality is that nearly all hyperinflations stem from a collapse of foreign exchange as a result of having to pay debt service. That was what caused Germany’s hyperinflation in the 1920s, not domestic German spending. It is what caused the Argentinean and other Latin American hyperinflations in the 1980s, and Chile’s hyperinflation earlier.

But once Greece frees itself from the odious debts forced upon it at financial gunpoint in 2010-12, its balance of payments will be roughly in balance (subject to some depreciation of the drachma; 30% is a number I heard bandied about in Athens last week).

To mimic Margaret Thatcher, “There is No Alternative” to withdrawing from the eurozone. The terms dictated for remaining in it was to sell off all of what remained in Greece’s public sector to European and U.S. buyers, at insider prices – but not to Russian buyers, even for the gas pipeline that was to have been sold.

Evidently the eurozone financial strategists thought that Tsipras and Varoufakis would simply surrender, and be promptly voted out of power, thereby crushing their socialist policy agenda. They miscalculated – and are now hoping to create as much anarchy as possible to punish the Greek people. The punishment is for not continuing to support their client oligarchy, which has moved most of its assets out of reach of the government.

But instead of Syriza losing credibility, it is the ECB – which refuses to create money to finance economic recovery, but only to pay the oligarchs’ banks so that they can continue to control the government. This control is now being weakened precisely because their banks are being weakened.

Greece’s Parliament last week released its Debt Truth Commission report explaining why Greece’s debts to the IMF and ECB are odious, and were taken on without a popular referendum approving these loans. Indeed, Mrs. Merkel and Mr. Sarkozy obeyed Mr. Obama and Geithner when the latter insisted at a G8 meeting that the ECB ignore the IMF economists’ analysis that Greece could not pay its debts, and bail out the banks. Geithner and Obama explained that U.S. banks had placed big financial bets that Greece would pay its private bondholders, so the ECB and IMF had to lend the government the funds to pay – but had to overthrow the country’s Prime Minister Papandreou who had urged a referendum on whether Greek people really wanted to commit economic and political suicide.

Financial technocrats were put in place to serve the domestic oligarchy and foreign bondholders. Greece was under financial attack just as deadly as a military attack. Finance is war. That is this week’s lesson.

And for the first time, debtor countries are realizing that they are in a state of war.

This is why markets are crashing on Monday, June 29.

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Eurozone financial strategists made it clear that they wanted to make an example of Syriza as a warning to Spain’s Potemos party, and anti-euro parties in Italy and France. The message was supposed to have been, “Avoid our austerity and we will cause chaos. Look at Greece.”

But the rest of Europe is interpreting the message in just the opposite way: “Remain in the eurozone and we will only create money to strengthen the financial oligarchy, the 1%. We will insist on budget surpluses (or at least, no deficits) so as to starve the economy of money and credit, forcing it to rely on commercial banks at interest.”

Greece has indeed become an example. But it is an example of the horror that the eurozone’s monetarists seek to impose on one economy after another, using debt as a lever to force privatization selloffs at distress prices.

In short, finance has shown itself to be the new mode of warfare. Resisting debt leverage andfinancial conquest is as legal as is resisting military invasion.

The post The Greek Debt Crisis And Crashing Markets – OpEd appeared first on Eurasia Review.

Juncker On Greece: ‘I Feel Betrayed’

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(EurActiv) — “I am deeply distressed, saddened by the spectacle that Europe gave last Saturday. In a single night, the European conscience has taken a heavy blow. Goodwill has somewhat evaporated,” said European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker, after Greece called for a referendum on Sunday on the EU bailout deal plan.

Greeks woke up to shuttered banks, closed cash machines and a climate of rumours and conspiracy theories on Monday, as a breakdown in talks between Athens and its creditors plunged the country deep into crisis.

Speaking at a news conference on Monday, Juncker added that “after months and months of discussions and debate, we were once more determined, patient, around a table working for the best possible agreement. This momentum has been broken unilaterally by the announcement of the referendum and above all by the intention to campaign on a ‘no’ to this agreement and above all by not telling the whole truth.”

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Colombia: Environmental Emergency After FARC Attack

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Colombian Environment Minister Gabriel Vallejo confirmed today that the oil leak caused by last Monday’s attack by the FARC (Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia) is now only 5km from the Bay of Tumaco.

After the blast along the Transandino pipeline that extends through the area of Tumaco, oil spilled into the Guisa and Mira Rivers, and now is very close to the Pacific Ocean.

Personnel of the state-run oil company Ecopetrol are at work building containment barriers and cleaning the spill. These emergency procedures have so far blocked around 3,000 of the 10,000 barrels of crude that leaked.

The leak also contaminated the drinking water sources of the city and the aqueduct service to be suspended, so Tumaco residents have been provided water with tank-trucks, attending that the government coordinate water supply from the bordering Esmeraldas province. Digging began Friday on two wells that should be ready within two weeks.

This is the wost environmental disaster in years for Colombia, minister Vallejo said.

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Greece: Banks Closed For Next 6 Days

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Banks in Greece and the country’s stock exchange will not open on Monday after people rushed to withdraw their cash.

Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras announced the closures after panic gripped the country in the lead-up to a referendum on bailout terms.

And it has emerged that members of the Greek Financial Stability Council have recommended that the banks stay shut for a total of six days.

The impact of that recommendation is unclear, but all banks will be closed for at least tomorrow, Mr Tsipras said.

Speaking in a televised address, the Prime Minister urged calm and maintained that bank deposits were safe.

He blamed European partners and the European Central Bank for forcing Greece’s hand.

And he said today’s developments would not halt the referendum plan next Sunday.

European creditors have refused a request to extend Greece’s international bailout beyond Tuesday, until after the referendum.

It means Athens is at risk of defaulting on its €1.5bn IMF payment, with membership of the eurozone hanging in the balance.

Mr Tsipras said: “The recent decisions of the Eurogroup and ECB have only one objective: to attempt to stifle the will of the Greek people.

“They will not succeed. The very opposite will occur: the Greek people will stand firm with even greater wilfulness.
“In the coming days, what’s needed is patience and composure. The bank deposits of the Greek people are fully secure.

“The same applies to the payment of wages and pensions – they are also guaranteed.
“In these critical hours, we must remember that the only thing to fear is fear itself.”

Sky’s Europe correspondent Robert Nisbet said the closures were an attempt to limit damage to banks as people rushed to withdraw money.

“This is a very serious development,” Nisbet said. “Things are looking particularly gloomy for Greece’s continued membership of the eurozone.”

As news of the closures spread, protesters gathered outside parliament in Athens.

President Barack Obama and German Chancellor Angela Merkel spoke on Sunday about the latest phase of the crisis.

Tomorrow, France and Germany will hold crisis meetings over the Greek crisis.

Earlier, the European Central Bank said it would maintain its emergency cash lifeline to Greece’s banks – but there would be no increase.

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Afghanistan 2015: India Should Keep Out Of Strategic Muddle – Analysis

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By Dr Subhash Kapila

Afghanistan in 2015 presents a complex strategic muddle for which India is neither politically, strategically, nor militarily equipped, to compete with the growing strategic convergence of Russia-China-Pakistan interests despite inherent self-contradictions among the three, and the unfolding Afghan-ISIS confrontation.

Admittedly, India has significant legitimate national security interests in the security and stability of Afghanistan, besides historical ties of shared strategic convergences on checkmating Pakistan’s unceasing ambitions for political and military control of Afghanistan. In 2015, the Afghanistan picture for India stands drastically changed with the ascendancy into power in Kabul of President Ashraf Ghani.

Afghanistan’s new President soon side-lined India in Afghanistan’s security calculus in favour of Pakistan and China, his first ports of call on becoming President. His courtesy call on the Pakistan Army Chief during his Islamabad visit was unbecoming of the Head of State of Afghanistan. He followed this up with cancellation of arms sales contracts with India and sending Afghan military officers for training in Pakistan and further announcing coordination of Afghanistan’s intelligence set-up with Pakistan Army’s intelligence agency-the ISI.

Need more be said about which way the wind is flowing in Kabul as far as India is concerned? Was India prepared to meet this eventuality by its diplomatic establishment and its intelligence agencies? Or was India’s Afghanistan policy been a casualty of the political power transition in New Delhi?

The stark reality is that in 2015 India was not prepared in terms of policy formulations and options on the impending strategic vacuum unfolding in Afghanistan with the winding down of the US military presence in Afghanistan of nearly fourteen years with doubtful gains and an uncertain future.

India is not politically, strategically and militarily equipped to retrieve the unfolding situation in Afghanistan back into its favour. Simply put in 2015, .Pakistan has outmanoeuvred India in Afghanistan by inducing China, and China in turn inducing Russia , to fill the strategic vacuum in Afghanistan with the United States not inclined to bear the Afghan cross any longer. In fact for some time there were voices within the American strategic community that China should be involved in Afghanistan’s security to stabilise Afghanistan. It is not clear as to what leverages China has over Afghanistan to stabilise it other than the proxy use of the Pakistan Army. Or is it that we can expect direct Chinese Army involvement in Afghanistan?

Politically in 2015, India can hardly outbid the convergent strategic interests of the Russia-Pakistan-China Troika on Afghanistan for the time being, especially when US strategic permissiveness hovers in the background for the same. Why has the United States once again abandoned Afghanistan? Why did the United States leave Afghanistan to Russia and China to step in? Did the United States confer with India on its unfolding intentions on Afghanistan? Has the United States been a party to side-line India’s legitimate strategic interests in Afghanistan?

The answers to these questions should prompt the Indian policy establishment to revise its policy stances on Russia, China and the United States. Pakistan the king-pin of Afghanistan’s strategic muddle needs a separate policy treatment. India’s policies in the Indian Subcontinent should focus on side-lining of Pakistan in regional politics.

Strategically, other than drawing-in Iran for concerted policy initiatives on Afghanistan because of shared strategic interests on keeping Pakistan, out of Afghanistan, India has no other strategic option. India lost the Iran-leverage by voting against Iran at the UN on the nuclear issue under US pressure by the previous Congress Government. Further with Iran’s close ties to Russia and China, it is unlikely to go against the new Russia-China interest in Afghanistan for geopolitical compulsions.

In the absence of geographic contiguity with Afghanistan and India not having developed sizeable military intervention capabilities in the region, India is not militarily equipped to intervene in Afghanistan. This may have been possible as a serious and viable option if India –Iran Strategic Partnership forged in the last decade was not allowed to wither by the previous government.

There is yet another new and disturbing dimension being added to the Afghanistan muddle and that is the building violent rivalry between the Pakistan-sponsored Afghan Taliban and the growing encroachment of the Middle East terrorist grouping of the ISIS. The ISIS is emerging as a potent force in Afghanistan’s playground of Islamic Jihadi forces and outfits in Afghanistan’s domestic domain. So much so that the Afghan Taliban was forced to declare that the ISIS should not intervene in Afghan affairs and let the Afghan Taliban spearhead the Islamist struggle in Afghanistan.

It will be an interesting scenario if the ISIS were able to eclipse the Afghan Taliban in the Afghan domestic power play of Islamist outfits. Let us not forget that in the Middle East it is reported that the ISIS draws support from Saudi Arabia and Turkey. As far as the Afghan Talban is concerned it is Pakistan’s protégé and prior to 2001, only China and the UAE maintained official contacts with the Afghan Taliban. Presently too China can be said to be the Afghan Taliban’s patron and facilitating their talks with other Afghan groups.

It needs to be noted that neither Russia nor China have any significant stakes in Afghanistan’s long term stability; their investments in Afghanistan would be limited to keeping away the spill-over of Islamists Jihadis into proximity of Russian peripheries and in case of China into Xinjiang where China is facing a virtual Islamic Jihad. With such limited aims one should not expect Russia or even China to emerge as long-terms determinants of Afghanistan’s future.

Therefore in 2015 Afghanistan presents a dismal strategic muddle which defies any prospects of security and stability emerging despite the Russia-China-Pakistan Troika attempting to fill-in the strategic vacuum.

Afghanistan stands famously termed as the ‘Graveyard of Imperial Pretensions’. Russia has earlier met this fate and the United States recently. Let now China meet the same fate. Why should India bother? Future events may themselves fashion themselves out in a manner that the United States persuades India, without the Pakistan-Russia-China baggage, to join in a joint effort to facilitate emergence of a secure and stable Afghanistan. In the following interregnum India must make serious assessment of its Afghanistan policy options and putting into place the wherewithal to implement those options.

India must also seriously ponder that in any future policy options on Afghanistan, there is not much scope of ‘Soft Power’ diplomacy. What will be required is to add the vitamin-supplement of “Hard Power” too to add muscle to Indian Afghan policies.

Concluding, the net assessment is that India should keep out of Afghanistan’s strategic muddle and let Russia once again and China more specifically in 2015 muddy its hands and reputation in untangling the Afghanistan muddle. Nor should India join any regional initiatives on Afghanistan sponsored by Russia and China, so that they could add more respectability by involving India.

The post Afghanistan 2015: India Should Keep Out Of Strategic Muddle – Analysis appeared first on Eurasia Review.

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