Geopolitics/Geoeconomics Thread - June 2015

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Viv S
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Re: Geopolitics/Geoeconomics Thread- June 2015

Post by Viv S »

Neshant wrote:All this is to create the artificial seniority of the fiat currency's claim to value. No rational person would otherwise consider claims to wealth printed out of thin air and issued as currency to have any value.
While all currency is artificial (including cryptocurrency), the dollar's preeminence among reserve currencies isn't artificial. There are very clear & cogent reasons why it is and will continue to be preferred over every other currency including the Euro, by most entities.
The whole point of enforcing the purchase of oil in dollars through threats of military force is to preserve the seniority of the dollar which is highly advantageous to the US but not to buyers. This seniority is artificial since no country would othereise want paper claims printed out of thin air. A huge portion of the value of the dollar comes from coercing countries to make their purchase of this strategic commodity in dollars.

Its quite the other way round. In the early days of the Bretton Woods and particularly after the US abandoned the gold standard, the GCC states helped cement the dollar's place as the world's reserve currency as a quid pro quo for US support (against regional pro-Soviet Arab socialist regimes).

Of course the world has come a long way since and the dollars position has only strengthened in the wake of the GFC crisis & Brexit. The likes of Iraq & Libya aren't a factor - the Euro barely existed at the time of the Iraq war while the Libyan intervention was spearheaded by France & UK (with the US sort of tagging along).
What will break up the US-EU's alliance ultimately is the latter's refusal to support this seniorage believing they are merely paying a "tax" to the US with no equivalent benefits forthcoming.
The problem with the Euro isn't the EU's allegiance to the US but fundamental problems with the Euro Area that prevent it from emerging as a viable and stable alternative to the US.
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Re: Geopolitics/Geoeconomics Thread- June 2015

Post by Vips »

US-Mexico-Canada trade deal could lead to China's isolation: Report.

The new US-Mexico-Canada Trade Agreement (USMCA) could become a major threat to China as it gives a near-veto power to America over any attempt by Canada or Mexico to try to reach a similar deal with countries of "non-market economy" status which Beijing is yet to acquire, a media report said.

Trade experts said the USMCA agreement, which replaces the 24-year-old North America Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), could be the forerunner to economic and trade alliance against China.

China, which became a member of the World Trade Organisation (WTO) in 2001, has not yet been granted the market economy status which could lead to radically lower anti-dumping duties on Chinese goods by forbidding the use of third-country price comparisons.

The US and the European Union opposed granting market economy status to China which is a technical distinction in the WTO framework that would reduce the ability of Washington and Brussels to impose trade sanctions on Beijing.

Beijing argues that it is entitled for the status as it has completed 15 years in the WTO. The WTO is yet to give its ruling.

Significantly, the USMCA agreement stipulates that any of the three parties to the deal has the right to be informed about any negotiations on a free-trade agreement with a "non-market economy" at an early stage.

If one of the three countries were to sign a free-trade agreement (FTA) with a non-market country, either of the other two would have the right to terminate the trilateral USMCA with six months' notice, the Hong Kong-based South China Morning Post reported Wednesday.

With the power to review and then impede or effectively veto a possible FTA between China and Canada or Mexico, the US can block potential "backchannels" for Chinese products to enter US markets through its neighbours, and gain a significant advantage in weakening Beijing's negotiating power in future trade talks, the Post reported.

China is Canada's second-largest trading partner after the US. Ottawa is in talks with Beijing since 2016 to work out an FTA.

But the USMCA clause has wider implications. If the US were to insert a similar clause into trade deals it is negotiating with the EU and Japan, it would mean Beijing's best hope of trading with the EU, Japan and Canada to offset an extended trade war with the US would be quashed, Post reported, quoting trade experts.

US President Donald Trump, the architect of the USMCA, is also asking India to sign a trade deal with America.

The US emphasis on trade deals with different countries could, in effect, create a new partnership hemming in China, the experts said.

Song Eui-young, an economics professor specialising international trade at Sogang University in Seoul, said the clause was a sign of Washington's desire to create an "economic alliance" against China.

Trump, who launched the current trade war with China, has changed his early tactic of quarrelling with all of the US' major trading partners simultaneously and is instead pursuing "a new trade stance to unite Europe, Japan and Canada into an economic alliance against China", Song said.

The veto clause, presenting a near-insurmountable obstacle to possible free-trade deals between China and major US trading partners, appears to be a necessary part of any new trade deals, the Post quoted him as saying.

Kotaro Tamura, an Asia fellow at the Milken Institute, said the USMCA "will definitely be the [new] blueprint to contain China in terms of trade", with Washington using the "non-market economy" clause as a loyalty test for its major trading partners.

"The US will try to reach a similar agreement with other countries surrounding China, including Japan," Tamura said.

China looks increasingly isolated despite its repeated claim that it is the true protector of global free trade and multilateralism centred on the WTO, the paper said. :rotfl:

A US-led trade system that excludes China would be the worst-case scenario for Beijing because such a structure could lead to fundamental realignments of international economic relations and global value chains, which in turn could curb China's economic rise, it said.

So far, China has signed 16 bilateral free-trade deals, including those with Australia, New Zealand, Iceland, South Korea, Singapore and the 10-nation Association of Southeast Asian Nations, in total accounting for about a quarter of China's total foreign trade. China has no free-trade deal with Canada, Mexico, Japan, Europe and the US.

Christine Loh, an adjunct professor at the Hong Kong University of Science and Technology, said the US' move to form a new trade alliance during its heated trade war with China would "change supply chains all over the world".

China's Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Ministry of Commerce have yet to comment on the USMCA's impact as China is currently celebrating week long National Day holidays.
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Re: Geopolitics/Geoeconomics Thread- June 2015

Post by ramana »

So new economic containment of China is in progress.
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Re: Geopolitics/Geoeconomics Thread- June 2015

Post by Prem »

ramana wrote:So new economic containment of China is in progress.
Best news of the decade . Arrogant China showed its hand so early in game and now they go way of Japan .
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Re: Geopolitics/Geoeconomics Thread- June 2015

Post by JE Menon »

This is a situation which China created by itself, possibly by a combination of hubris and neglect. It failed to see that its mercantilist approach, combined with a relentless focus on one-sided exports, was not sustainable. And for all its vaunted long-sightedness, it failed to recognise that a backlash would (and could only) involve tariffs. Trump has demonstrated, whether anyone supports him or not (I do), that only blunt instruments work in extreme situations. China is looking for dominance, not co-existence. That is problematic, when you are looking at another who is also of the same mind - but with less to lose by upping the ante.

This is what Trump has done. No other leader, certainly not Hillary and almost certainly not Sanders would have gone this route of aggressive tariff expansion. But this is the only thing that has a chance to work in moderating Han ambitions and providing a sort of reality check on what can and cannot be done in the real world. The general silence from the mainstream media on the actual signficance of what is going on is dumbfounding - but that too just indicates how considerably corrupted, penetrated and venal that pillar of democracy has become, particularly (but not only) in the US.

What sort of equilibrium will emerge after this confrontation comes to a close, in one way or another, remains to be seen. But I believe that it will be one in which significant damage is done to China's current way of war by business practices. Internal strife with significant leadership disruption is entirely likely.
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Re: Geopolitics/Geoeconomics Thread- June 2015

Post by chetak »

JE Menon wrote:This is a situation which China created by itself, possibly by a combination of hubris and neglect. It failed to see that its mercantilist approach, combined with a relentless focus on one-sided exports, was not sustainable. And for all its vaunted long-sightedness, it failed to recognise that a backlash would (and could only) involve tariffs. Trump has demonstrated, whether anyone supports him or not (I do), that only blunt instruments work in extreme situations. China is looking for dominance, not co-existence. That is problematic, when you are looking at another who is also of the same mind - but with less to lose by upping the ante. This is what Trump has done.

What sort of equilibrium will emerge after this confrontation comes to a close, in one way or another, remains to be seen. But I believe that it will be one in which significant damage is done to China's current way of war by business practices. Internal strife with significant leadership disruption is entirely likely.
For decades, every country has been pussy footing around china, paying lip service to their oft repeated taqiyya claims of "peaceful rise" when it was anything but.

The first really big reality check for the hans was when Modi refused to back down in doklam. Before this, they were used to groups of nations disputing them in the SCS and some other places and they quickly reacted with belligerence every time they thought that they were being challenged or provoked.

The previous regime was hamstrung by the hans and was led docilely by the nose, the MEA went about abjectly kow towing to the hans, deathly afraid of displeasing them, NSA, foreign sec all fell in line, including people at the very top.

This is also precisely how most of the world behaved with them.

no wonder the han ambassador, completely stumped by doklam, got cozy with certain opposition people in dilli. The reaction of their global times, every time a new Agni series of the missile is launched with its declared "5000 KM" range, they literally froth at the mouth and get apoplectic.

Now, the opposition to the hans has grown many multifold and in many countries, they are being opposed tooth and nail everywhere. Trump has completely blown away their self created aura of invincibility and their reputation is in tatters.

the slow moving dragon has little defence against a rampaging trump.
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Re: Geopolitics/Geoeconomics Thread- June 2015

Post by chanakyaa »

The Big Hack: How China Used a Tiny Chip to Infiltrate U.S. Companies
The attack by Chinese spies reached almost 30 U.S. companies, including Amazon and Apple, by compromising America’s technology supply chain, according to extensive interviews with government and corporate sources...
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Re: Geopolitics/Geoeconomics Thread- June 2015

Post by chanakyaa »

Anti-panda campaign car in the second gear...

New Evidence of Hacked Supermicro Hardware Found in U.S. Telecom
The discovery shows that China continues to sabotage critical technology components bound for America.
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Re: Geopolitics/Geoeconomics Thread- June 2015

Post by ramana »

#UN Reform...
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Uniting_for_Consensus

This group looks like a bunch of disgruntled nations with agenda to prevent new emerging G4 powers the seat at high table....
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Re: Geopolitics/Geoeconomics Thread- June 2015

Post by ArjunPandit »

ramana wrote:#UN Reform...
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Uniting_for_Consensus

This group looks like a bunch of disgruntled nations with agenda to prevent new emerging G4 powers the seat at high table....
soko was the surprising member of the list. Rest all are losers who still think they ruled the world
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Re: Geopolitics/Geoeconomics Thread- June 2015

Post by Singha »

despite the loud denials by apple and amazon about the hw spyware thing, bloomberg has stood by its story and come up with a second story today.

the repercussions are catatrophic for the vast number of govt owned servers and sensitive corporate servers worldwide. not even a govt has the resources to take apart and monitor all servers .... my employer a chota mota player at the high table alone must have some 10,000....we do not remotely have the resources to take them offline one by one into a xray lab/security sandbox and monitor for signs of alien life :D

the second article is about bugging the ubiquitous ethernet hw, each server usually has minimum of 2 such ports, often 2 + 4 = 6 for servers hosting client virtual machines

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles ... nd=premium

just the large public cloud providers will have millions of intel and amd powered servers online on any day.
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Re: Geopolitics/Geoeconomics Thread- June 2015

Post by Neshant »

Singha wrote:despite the loud denials by apple and amazon about the hw spyware thing, bloomberg has stood by its story and come up with a second story today.

the repercussions are catatrophic for the vast number of govt owned servers and sensitive corporate servers worldwide. not even a govt has the resources to take apart and monitor all servers .... my employer a chota mota player at the high table alone must have some 10,000....we do not remotely have the resources to take them offline one by one into a xray lab/security sandbox and monitor for signs of alien life :D

the second article is about bugging the ubiquitous ethernet hw, each server usually has minimum of 2 such ports, often 2 + 4 = 6 for servers hosting client virtual machines

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles ... nd=premium

just the large public cloud providers will have millions of intel and amd powered servers online on any day.
If this is the kind of stuff Chinis are exporting to US, imagine the kind of bugged crap they must be sending India.

GAGAN/NAVIC receivers designed & imported from China by some Indian company under "Make in India" banner must be having a nicely hidden shutdown feature. In any war scenario, a single RF command could shut down millions of vehicles and vessels using it in India.
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Re: Geopolitics/Geoeconomics Thread- June 2015

Post by Neshant »

JE Menon wrote: What sort of equilibrium will emerge after this confrontation comes to a close, in one way or another, remains to be seen. But I believe that it will be one in which significant damage is done to China's current way of war by business practices. Internal strife with significant leadership disruption is entirely likely.
"Re-education camps" will be a growth industry in China in the years ahead as the country cracks down on the aforementioned strife.

A bit of re-education and you'll be all cured.
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Re: Geopolitics/Geoeconomics Thread- June 2015

Post by chanakyaa »

MBS forgot that his nuts are in someone else's hands

Davos in the Desert(ed)

Smoothie Barbaria Summit in Crisis
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Re: Geopolitics/Geoeconomics Thread- June 2015

Post by Suraj »

MIGHT TRUMPS RIGHT: LESSONS LEARNED BY CHINA IN THE OPIUM WARS RING TRUE IN US TRADE ROW
Are there lessons Beijing can draw from the first opium war (1839-42) as it faces an increasingly adversarial United States that regards China as a threat to its strategic dominance?

That war saw a British force of about 20,000 troops sail to defeat a Chinese army of more than 220,000 marshalled by the Qing dynasty then ruling China. It marked the beginning of what has been seared into the Chinese memory as “100 years of humiliation” by foreign powers.
...
By the early 18th century, the British had so taken to drinking tea that some in the British government called it a “necessity of life”. The tea came from the southern Chinese city of Canton, designated by the Qing government as the only place where trading with foreigners was allowed. By 1725, the British East India Company was importing 250,000 pounds of tea per year. This ballooned to 24 million pounds per year by 1805.

Unfortunately for the British, the Chinese bought few British products, and worse, they wanted to be paid only in silver. Thus, between 1710 and 1760, Britain paid 26 million pounds of the precious metal for its tea.
...
Britain soon ran out of silver and ideas of how to pay for its tea until it stumbled on the one item the Chinese liked and became addicted to – opium. In 1773, the East India Company secured a monopoly on the production and sale of opium grown in India.

And so, through subterfuge and underhanded tactics such as using smugglers, the British flooded the Chinese market with opium – paid for in silver, of course – even though it was banned by the Qing government. In the last decade of the 18th century, 200 chests of opium, each weighing 64kg, went from India to China. By 1838, this grew to 40,000 chests, and the trade deficit had reversed in Britain’s favour. The Qing government, alarmed by the addiction spreading like wildfire among its subjects, ordered Viceroy Lin Zexu to stamp out the problem.

He took drastic action, including the confiscation of more than 20,000 chests of opium and detention of the British traders. The British merchants called on London to intervene. When negotiations failed, London sent the Royal Navy and the rest, as they say, is history.

At the time, Britain was ambivalent about going into a war on behalf of drug smugglers, as American historian Stephen Platt tells it in his book Imperial Twilight. For example, the young William Gladstone, who was to become four-time prime minister, wrote in his diary: “I am in dread of the judgments of God upon England for our national iniquity towards China.” He and other opponents of the war nearly succeeded in stopping it through an 1840 motion in the House of Commons.

In the end, Britain chose to attack China because, among other things, the accurate intelligence that it had gathered pointed to an opportunity to “open up” a weak China with a huge market and remove all restrictions on foreign traders. What followed its victory in 1842 was a succession of unequal treaties in which China was forced to give concession after concession to not just Britain but also other imperialist powers, including Japan.

Herein lies the most important lesson – foreign powers could do what they wanted because of their might, morality be damned. Beijing understands this today even if Daoguang, the Qing emperor, did not. He thought it was just a law enforcement issue and China was on the moral high ground in ridding itself of the drug menace. He could not see the larger strategic picture.

Not so for Beijing today. It knows the US and its allies are fearful China will succeed in leapfrogging them in all the hi-tech sectors that matter in the future and so will do what they can to stymie that. Hence the complaints about Chinese subsidies for key industries, intellectual-property theft, denying entry of foreign companies into strategic sectors … the list goes on.

Beijing cannot be so stupid as to not realise there is merit to some of the complaints about its unfair trade practices. It has proclaimed time and again that it is embarking on reform and market liberalisation. But how far and fast to go without jeopardising its own development strategy – or appearing to the world to be stalling? Having declared it will not negotiate “with a knife at its throat”, it must be looking for a way out without looking as if it has capitulated to US pressure.

In this regard, Chinese historian Mao Haijian has thrown up an interesting thought in his book on the opium war, Collapse of the Celestial Empire.

He points to another seminal event in Asian history – the opening of Japanese ports to American traders after a show of force by commodore Matthew Perry, whose naval convoy sailed into Tokyo Bay in 1853 to prise open markets Japan had closed to the world for 220 years.

Mao argues that the Tokugawa shogunate, the de facto ruler of Japan at the time, was right not to resist the Americans’ gunboat diplomacy, having watched the Qing government fight vastly superior British forces. This so stirred the elite in Japan that they overthrew the inward-looking shogunate, implemented important reforms through the Meiji Restoration, abandoned learning from the Chinese and turned to imbibing Western ideas and technology in a concerted national movement best described as “Japanese soul, foreign skills”. Within 50 years, Japan became a world power.

Mao is careful not to suggest the Qing government not put up a fight. But the careful reader might discern a hint that war could have been prevented had cooler heads prevailed – and China could have had breathing space to build its capabilities and fight another day.

On that, US historian Platt is in agreement. His view is that had Viceroy Lin and his British interlocutor Charles Elliot not overreacted and caused a collapse in talks, the outcome could have been very different.

So is there room for China and the US, now seemingly locked on a collision course, to pause and ponder? Former Australian prime minister Kevin Rudd, who knows his China, thinks Beijing is likely to double down.

If he is right, it can only mean Beijing is prepared for the worst. And having seen how the Royal Navy could roam freely in its waters and attack cities at will during the opium war, it is inconceivable that Beijing has not learned the importance of protecting its sea lanes.

Why else is it investing heavily in a rapid military build-up in the South China Sea?
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Re: Geopolitics/Geoeconomics Thread- June 2015

Post by ramana »

GD, I talked to a Desi network guy. He thinks the Bloomberg story is psy-ops.
Says no sys admin would be so clueless at packets moving to unknown IPs.
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Re: Geopolitics/Geoeconomics Thread- June 2015

Post by Gyan »

Bloomberg is anti Trump, anti tariffs & pro Chinese Imports. Why will it come up with a fake story?
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Re: Geopolitics/Geoeconomics Thread- June 2015

Post by chanakyaa »

India currently has no sovereign dollar bonds outstanding and most of its debt is rupee-denominated. The more and more I see news/events like the following piece, my appreciation grows stronger for such strategy to stay in rupees.

August 7, 2018
Turkey May Be Locked Out of Bond Market as U.S. Sanctions Bite
...
Dollar-denominated June 2028 bonds of Turkiye Is Bankasi AS lost 27 percent, while Akbank TAS’s March 2027 securities declined 23 percent. High yields in the secondary market may mean that issuers will wait for asset prices to stabilize before testing the waters, even though they have $17 billion foreign-exchange debt coming due by the end of next year, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.
...
Turkey blinks (just before Thanksgiving :lol:). Looking at the amount of debt maturing, Turkey had no choice but to end up on Yankee dinner plate.
Turkey Releases Pastor After 2 Years In Prison

10 hours ago
Turkey eyes return to international debt market with new dollar bond
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Re: Geopolitics/Geoeconomics Thread- June 2015

Post by chanakyaa »

Geopolitics of Gas (Energy) Connections in Europe (and understanding armed conflicts and regime changes)

Lots of projects are underway to provide natural gas (and oil to some extent) to europe. Stakes are high -- whether provider of energy is in western camp (within the wyestern camp if the payments occur in dollar or euro) or russ fold, whether the provider is large enough to replace russ as the provider of oil/gas to oiurope (and that can be used to choke russ) etc. etc. And, while this is being played out, sultan ottoman finds himself (and his country) in charge of the biggest energy toll booth of da world..

Until alternative source of energy becomes a realty, India is in such enviable position (customer is bhagwan), similar to EU, as the country slowly becoming one of the largest consumer of energy. Question is, can India play such dynamics to its advantage, instead of acting like sheepish europe

Europe's Southern Gas Corridor: The Italian (Dis)connection

The Impact of Turkish Stream on European Energy Security and the Southern Gas Corridor

Three Pipelines and Three Seas: BRUA, TAP, the IAP and Gasification in Southeast Europe

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Re: Geopolitics/Geoeconomics Thread- June 2015

Post by Gyan »

I wonder whether Trump will go through with third round of Chinese Tariffs & also hit German auto exports.

France wants to draw a redline on agricultural imports & sacrifice Germans to Trump actions.
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Re: Geopolitics/Geoeconomics Thread- June 2015

Post by ramana »

3rd Quarter Economic Results in US are showing the strain of the tariff war.
Cost of raw materials is going up and effecting US company well being.
It caused quite drop in DJA today.
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Re: Geopolitics/Geoeconomics Thread- June 2015

Post by Prem »

ramana wrote:3rd Quarter Economic Results in US are showing the strain of the tariff war.
Cost of raw materials is going up and effecting US company well being.
It caused quite drop in DJA today.
Market recovered in the end . Real fun will start with upcoming recession which may last more than decade.
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Re: Geopolitics/Geoeconomics Thread- June 2015

Post by disha »

^Why would there be a recession?

The last recession was triggered off by housing crises. Lets take a look at recessions from 1960. Almost 60 years and 2.5 generations (retired, working and almost getting into workforce in next 5-10 years).

1958/60 -> Fed's contractionary policy -> to fight inflation
1970 -> End of the apollo spending, recession was mild.
1973/75 -> End of vietnam war, moving to gold standard & OPEC crisis (the biggie, concomitant rise in inflation due to higher energy input costs )
1980/82 -> Fed's contractionary policy again -> to fight inflation & Iran's oil embargo (another higher energy input costs, leads to inflation leads to fed raising interests)
1990/91 -> Savings & Loans crises
2001 recession -> .com bust and 9/11 and war on Iraq.
2008-2012 -> The great recession. Housing crises got us the great depression.

Hence the only way we can get into a recession is when Fed keeps on increasing the interest rates. In 60 and 80s they did that. And again they are doing now. Other than that, there is no major reason to worry about recession, the china trade war is a sideshow. Much needed.
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Re: Geopolitics/Geoeconomics Thread- June 2015

Post by Muppalla »

Decade Forecast: 2015-2025 from Stratfor
The United States is prepared to mitigate the situation with air power and limited forces on the ground but will not be able or willing to impose a settlement. Turkey, whose southern border is made vulnerable by this fighting, will be slowly drawn into the fighting. By the end of this decade, Turkey will emerge as the major regional power, and Turkish-Iranian competition will increase as a result.
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Re: Geopolitics/Geoeconomics Thread- June 2015

Post by Muppalla »

Now read the above as context and the following news.

Khashoggi's Murder May Tip Middle East Power Balance Towards Turkey
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Re: Geopolitics/Geoeconomics Thread- June 2015

Post by Neshant »

They plan to build 16 nuclear reactors worth 80 billion.

US is selling them reactors ironically.

Everyone is the hood is building reactors these days.

There must be a ton of Pakistanis running these reactors and perhaps Indians too!

----

Crown Prince Launches Saudi Arabia's First Nuclear Reactor On Very Day Sanctions Hit Iran

https://www.zerohedge.com/news/2018-11- ... ctions-hit
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Re: Geopolitics/Geoeconomics Thread- June 2015

Post by ramana »

Its early November and the year is drawing to a close.
Let us list the hits and misses of the year 2018 for World and India.
World
North Korea moved back from the brink +
MBS real face revealed -


etc....
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Re: Geopolitics/Geoeconomics Thread- June 2015

Post by chanakyaa »

ramana wrote: Let us list the hits and misses of the year 2018 for World and India.
Will start with World...

- Acceleration of De-globalization / Protectionism (-)
- North Korea moved back from the brink (+)
- End of Syrian War (+)
- Economic / Tech Cold War on Middle Kingdom (+/-)
- Ukraine Converted to / Turned into Russia’s Pakistan (-)
- Iran Sanctions Reinstated (-)
- Europe Continues to Support Iran Agreement (+)
- Brexit and Irrelevance of Britain on World Stage (+)
- MBS real face revealed (-)
- EU in Early Stages of Weaning Away from Unkil (in the areas of Currency, Defense, and Tech) (+)
- New Caspian Agreement (Russian, Azerbaijan, Iran, Kazakhstan, and Turkmenistan) (+)
- Migration Crisis on the Southern Border of Unkil (-)
- Rise of Right Leaning Leadership in Brazil (and impact on BRICS ??)
- Argentina Near Default / IMF Bailout (-)
- Turkey’s Soft Exit from NATO (+/-)
- Greater Relevance of Indo-Pacific (+)
- TPP (ex Unkil) becomes effective as Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership (+)
- Euro USD Parity Stabilizes (+)
- Economic Deterioration of Pakistan (+) Image
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Re: Geopolitics/Geoeconomics Thread- June 2015

Post by ShyamSP »

chanakyaa wrote:
Gains for Russia:
- Acceleration of De-globalization / Protectionism
- End of Syrian War
- Economic / Tech Cold War on Middle Kingdom
- Ukraine Converted to / Turned into Russia’s Pakistan
- Iran Sanctions Reinstated
- Europe Continues to Support Iran Agreement
- Brexit and Irrelevance of Britain on World Stage
- MBS real face revealed
- EU in Early Stages of Weaning Away from Unkil (in the areas of Currency, Defense, and Tech)
- New Caspian Agreement (Russian, Azerbaijan, Iran, Kazakhstan, and Turkmenistan)
- Migration Crisis on the Southern Border of Unkil
- Turkey’s Soft Exit from NATO
- Euro USD Parity Stabilizes

Gains for India:
- Acceleration of De-globalization / Protectionism
- North Korea moved back from the brink
- End of Syrian War
- Economic / Tech Cold War on Middle Kingdom
- Europe Continues to Support Iran Agreement
- Brexit and Irrelevance of Britain on World Stage
- MBS real face revealed
- EU in Early Stages of Weaning Away from Unkil (in the areas of Currency, Defense, and Tech)
- New Caspian Agreement (Russian, Azerbaijan, Iran, Kazakhstan, and Turkmenistan)
- Migration Crisis on the Southern Border of Unkil
- Turkey’s Soft Exit from NATO
- Economic Deterioration of Pakistan
additionally & more importantly,
- US Tariffs on China
- Trump did what Trump does
Singha
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Re: Geopolitics/Geoeconomics Thread- June 2015

Post by Singha »

syria has been a historical battleground between whoever ruled the persian heartland (scythians, bactrians, parthians, achaemenids, sassanids, safavids...) and the anatolian-greek coast region (greeks, romans, ottomans, macedonians) . the fertile northern belt of syria has been a favourite route of armies marching to attack persia. the other route is via georgia. the syrian desert like deir azor is the least favourite route...horses have no fodder on that route. only arab armies with camels and desert bred horses may have moved to and fro on this southern road to damascus.

the turkey iran fight is the latest episode of this, but with powerful and cash rich external actors also supporting their corners.
ricky_v
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Re: Geopolitics/Geoeconomics Thread- June 2015

Post by ricky_v »

https://home.isi.org/whose-civilization ... qus_thread
Huntington did not envision the clash of civilizations as a new Cold War, in which even without direct military confrontation two or more blocs would vie for world supremacy. He was instead skeptical about the American-led West’s own universalist aspirations: its leaders’ desire to transform other civilizations into copies of theirs, by force if necessary. Their attempts would provoke resentment and retaliation—which is arguably just what we have seen, in the form of terrorism and insurgency from the Islamic world and Russian interference in Western elections, among other things. But Western overreach would be only one source of the many kinds of clashes to break out in the twenty-first century, Huntington argued. Anywhere rival civilizations abutted each other, including within “torn countries” that did not fully belong to one bloc or another, conflict could erupt.
Certain objections may spring readily to mind. Latin America is overwhelmingly Catholic and Protestant, and Romance languages predominate. Why then isn’t Latin America part of the West? And why is Japan distinguished from the rest of East Asia, which is already an enormously diverse region? The first question is more easily answered than the second. In terms of its historical economic and political evolution, Latin America is distinct from the “Anglo” countries and western Europe, even if it is part of their larger religious and linguistic communities. Perhaps Latin America will one day merge with the advanced West—Huntington doesn’t provide any grounds to rule out the possibility. Nevertheless, as of today there are few places of a hundred miles’ radius in Latin America that one could mistake for a part of Europe or the United States.
The “core state” is a concept that figures prominently in the book. The United States, Russia, India, and China are today the core states of Western, Orthodox, Hindu, and East Asian civilizations respectively. There are no core states—paramount military, economic, and cultural powers that exercise leadership—in Islamic, Latin American, or African civilization, though there are some states that are clearly more powerful than others. A reckoning of how each civilization stands in competition with the rest of the world today has to take account of the presence or absence of a core state. They are, in effect, imperial powers, able to coordinate the other states within their blocs and wage defensive or offensive wars with other great powers and blocs.
Islam is unusual as a civilization, with universal aspirations but no core state at present. The absence of a core state contributes to the Islamic world’s tendency to generate terrorism and insurgencies. One function of a core state is to vindicate the interests of its civilization before other great powers, whether through war or hardball negotiation. Another function of a core state is to organize violence and suppress wildcat terrorists. Islam has had core states before, from the early Caliphate to the Ottoman Empire. Today several states vie for primacy in the Islamic world—Saudi Arabia, Iran, Turkey, and to some extent Pakistan (which, however, is more preoccupied with India than with leading the Islamic world), while groups like al-Qaeda and the Islamic State also present themselves as if they were core institutions of their civilizations. States, however, are increasingly coming into direct conflict, and the future of clashes within Islamic civilization—perhaps between Islam and other civilizations as well—looks to lie not with terrorists but with governments. Islamist forces have little hope of defeating anyone else or settling their differences with one another until a core state comes into being—which may not occur for decades, if ever.
Orthodox civilization is tough but largely defensive in orientation, a characterization that may seem surprising in light of Russia’s activities in Ukraine, Syria, and Western elections. But Orthodox civilization has neither the material resources that make East Asian civilization a world power nor the material and moral urge to expand everywhere that characterizes the West.
Latin America, on the other hand, may over time be open to Westernization—yet there is also the risk that the West will become more like Latin America. The risk here is not demographic but political and economic: Latin America is what Western civilization looks like when it doesn’t work, when economic disparities are too wide and political and civic institutions fail. The extremes of political left and right that routinely appear in Latin America should prompt Americans and Europeans to reflect on just how moderate their own supposed “polarization” is. Mexico, Central America, and South America have great potentialities, yet their institutions have not been able to fulfill them. Western institutions have by contrast been highly successful—but there is no guarantee that such will always be the case.
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Re: Geopolitics/Geoeconomics Thread- June 2015

Post by Avarachan »

This is an extremely interesting article by Pepe Escobar. Russia wants to create “`a common space for economic, logistic and information cooperation, peace and security from Shanghai to Lisbon and New Delhi to Murmansk.'”
http://thesaker.is/how-the-new-silk-roa ... r-eurasia/

He references these six reports by Russia's Valdai Discussion Club.
http://valdaiclub.com/a/reports/report- ... t-ocean-6/
(This page has the links for all 6 reports.)
The sixth report in the Toward the Great Ocean series is distinct from all the previous reports, which sought to prove the expedience and usefulness of Russia’s Turn to the East mostly from economic, transport and geostrategic points of view. Solutions were suggested precisely in these areas. One of the reports was dedicated to the concept of the Greater Eurasian Partnership from Lisbon to Jakarta, Shanghai, or Tokyo. This report focuses on people, history, ideology, and education. It also covers the ideas behind Russia’s Turn to the East, as well as its media and spiritual aspects.

The first stage of Russia’s turn to the rising Asia is underway, with the Russian Far East advancing twice as fast as the rest of the country (although this is still not enough). Dozens of big plants are opening. Yet, today we can see more clearly the limitations that were not as obvious before. Eastern Russia’s development has not yet become a clear and common cause for the nation at large – the nation that is in dire need of grand projects. Neither do many Far Eastern residents really believe in it, with the outfl ow of people from the area, though having reduced, is continuing to this day. The goal is to formulate a fundamentally new way of engaging the people living in Russian Asia – the Far East and Siberia – who have interacted with their neighbors for centuries, who know and are able to comprehend them well. Furthermore, Russians in general should change their attitude to country’s Turn to the East, where the economic, technological and cultural markets of the future lie.

We are not heading East emptyhanded. We bring not only resources and transportation capacities, but also act as the major provider and guarantor of international security. More importantly, we have an opportunity to establish close cooperation with Asia without breaking off ties with Europe and to become the centre of the Greater Eurasian Partnership, which has been proposed by Moscow and backed by Beijing as being by 90 per cent in agreement with its Belt and Road Initiative (BRI).

Report: Toward the Great Ocean, or the New Globalization of Russia
Report: Toward the Great Ocean-2, or Russia’s Breakthrough to Asia
Report: Toward the Great Ocean-3: Creating Central Eurasia
Report: Toward the Great Ocean-4: Turn to the East. Preliminary Results and New Objectives
Report: Toward the Great Ocean-5: From The Turn To The East To Greater Eurasia
Ravi Karumanchiri
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Re: Geopolitics/Geoeconomics Thread- June 2015

Post by Ravi Karumanchiri »

How Britain stole $45 trillion from India

And lied about it.
Jason Hickelby Jason Hickel
14 Dec 2018

There is a story that is commonly told in Britain that the colonisation of India - as horrible as it may have been - was not of any major economic benefit to Britain itself. If anything, the administration of India was a cost to Britain. So the fact that the empire was sustained for so long - the story goes - was a gesture of Britain's benevolence.

New research by the renowned economist Utsa Patnaik - just published by Columbia University Press - deals a crushing blow to this narrative. Drawing on nearly two centuries of detailed data on tax and trade, Patnaik calculated that Britain drained a total of nearly $45 trillion from India during the period 1765 to 1938.

It's a staggering sum. For perspective, $45 trillion is 17 times more than the total annual gross domestic product of the United Kingdom today.

How did this come about?

It happened through the trade system.

<snip>

Meanwhile, London ended up with all of the gold and silver that should have gone directly to the Indians in exchange for their exports.

This corrupt system meant that even while India was running an impressive trade surplus with the rest of the world - a surplus that lasted for three decades in the early 20th century - it showed up as a deficit in the national accounts because the real income from India's exports was appropriated in its entirety by Britain.

Some point to this fictional "deficit" as evidence that India was a liability to Britain. But exactly the opposite is true. Britain intercepted enormous quantities of income that rightly belonged to Indian producers. India was the goose that laid the golden egg. Meanwhile, the "deficit" meant that India had no option but to borrow from Britain to finance its imports. So the entire Indian population was forced into completely unnecessary debt to their colonial overlords, further cementing British control.

Britain used the windfall from this fraudulent system to fuel the engines of imperial violence - funding the invasion of China in the 1840s and the suppression of the Indian Rebellion in 1857. And this was on top of what the Crown took directly from Indian taxpayers to pay for its wars. As Patnaik points out, "the cost of all Britain's wars of conquest outside Indian borders were charged always wholly or mainly to Indian revenues."

<snip>

All of this is a sobering antidote to the rosy narrative promoted by certain powerful voices in Britain. The conservative historian Niall Ferguson has claimed that British rule helped "develop" India. While he was prime minister, David Cameron asserted that British rule was a net help to India.

This narrative has found considerable traction in the popular imagination: according to a 2014 YouGov poll, 50 percent of people in Britain believe that colonialism was beneficial to the colonies.

Yet during the entire 200-year history of British rule in India, there was almost no increase in per capita income. In fact, during the last half of the 19th century - the heyday of British intervention - income in India collapsed by half. The average life expectancy of Indians dropped by a fifth from 1870 to 1920. Tens of millions died needlessly of policy-induced famine.

Britain didn't develop India. Quite the contrary - as Patnaik's work makes clear - India developed Britain.

<snip>
Neshant
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Re: Geopolitics/Geoeconomics Thread- June 2015

Post by Neshant »

Which western company in their right mind would be buying Telecom equipment from Huawei which originated from the PLA.

--------

Chinese Media Deny WSJ Report About Global Banks Cutting Ties With Huawei

https://www.zerohedge.com/news/2018-12- ... ies-huawei
Neshant
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Re: Geopolitics/Geoeconomics Thread- June 2015

Post by Neshant »

Another obor debt trap scheme unfolding..
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China To Take Over Kenya's Largest Port Over Unpaid Chinese Loans

https://www.zerohedge.com/news/2018-12- ... inese-loan
Austin
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Re: Geopolitics/Geoeconomics Thread- June 2015

Post by Austin »

How India strengthened foreign relations in 2018, expectations for 2019

https://www.indiatoday.in/india/story/h ... 2018-12-27
Neshant
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Re: Geopolitics/Geoeconomics Thread- June 2015

Post by Neshant »

Sharing is caring.

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Poland Wants France To Share Nukes And Voting Seat On The UNSC

https://www.zerohedge.com/news/2019-01- ... -seat-unsc
ricky_v
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Re: Geopolitics/Geoeconomics Thread- June 2015

Post by ricky_v »

https://henryjacksonsociety.org/wp-cont ... rt-web.pdf
Essentially,a sort of uk circlejerk with shiny graphs to explain why uk is still the 2nd most powerful nation (and the most powerful butler). Other nations are mentioned as well.
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