In These New Times

A new paradigm for a post-imperial world

Archive for the ‘Multipolar world’ Category

The New World Order is not turning out as planned. Instead of all power emanating from London and Washington, new power centres are emerging to the South and East: a new global equilibrium raises the possibility of a new post-imperial age of peace and equality between nations.

Milestone Russia-Ukraine summit: towards a new strategic partnership?

Posted by seumasach on May 18, 2010

Victor Pirozhenko

Global Research

18th May, 2010

Leaders of East Europe’s two largest countries — Russian President D. Medvedev and Ukrainian President V. Yanukovych — will meet in Kyiv on May 17-18. In its initial form, the agenda included the signing of five agreements:

– on the demarcation of the overland section of the border between Russia and Ukraine;

– on Ukraine’s joining the Russian GLONASS satellite navigation system;

– on the cooperation between the two countries in the financial sector, education, and culture.

Chief of the Russian President’s Administration S. Naryshkin said the Russian and Ukrainian Presidents would also issue a joint declaration on European security and the resolution of the conflict in Transdnistria.

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Colin Buchanan trashing lib dem conservative coalition on RT

Posted by smeddum on May 17, 2010

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Russia opens a new pipeline of diplomacy

Posted by seumasach on May 14, 2010

M.K.Bhadrakumar

Asia Times

15th May, 2010

Russian diplomacy has been on a roll in recent months, the revival of ties with Ukraine being the most dramatic manifestation. But a string of successes, major and minor, sung and unsung, has been notched up below that high point – in Poland, Azerbaijan, Uzbekistan, Norway and Syria.

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Ahmadinejad steals ‘smart power’ torch

Posted by seumasach on May 6, 2010

Kaveh L Afrasiabi

Asia Times

7th May, 2010

Iranian President Mahmud Ahmadinejad seems to only gain in strength with the growing intensity of North American and European attacks against him. Such is the global community’s slide into competing camps, his championing of the nuclear “have-nots” – the bulk of the world’s population – gives him the demeanor of a peace activist who speaks the language of disarmament.

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Time for a nuclear samba

Posted by seumasach on May 6, 2010

With Europe still a vassal of US/UK there isn’t really much point in talking to the “West”: dealing with Brazil and BRIC makes a lot more sense for Iran.

Pepe Escobar

Asia Times

7th May, 20120

It does not necessarily take two to samba – but if you samba as a group the result is much more infectious. Brazil has advanced a proposal to unblock the Iranian nuclear dossier that is in fact the common view among the BRIC countries (Brazil, Russia, India,China), the emerging geopolitical counter-power to United Stateshegemony.

Iran has all but agreed that Brazil should be the mediator between Tehran and the United Nations – rather than the axis of the US, Britain and France inside the UN Security Council, plus Germany – to finally settle the Iranian nuclear dossier. According to the Fars news agency, after his visit early this week to New York, Iranian President Mahmud Ahmadinejad, in a phone call with Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez, told him that Iran had agreed with the Brazilian proposal for a nuclear fuel swap deal for the Tehran research reactor, which produces medical isotopes for cancer treatment. The proposal will be discussed in detail when Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva visits Tehran by the end of next week.

The Brazilian government – on a “soft” collision course with the Barack Obama administration – has been positioning itself as a mediator for some time. The nuclear swap was first proposed by the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) late last year in Vienna. The idea was for Iran to transfer the bulk of its low enriched uranium abroad and have access to nuclear fuel rods supplied by France.

The negotiation stalled after Tehran proposed that the swap might take place in Japan, Brazil or Turkey. Brazil’s Lula, by the end of April, suggested the better idea was for the swap to take place in a country neighboring Iran. Then Tehran settled on its own islandof Kish. The swap inside its own borders was considered by Iran as a question of national sovereignty. The US and the Europeans rejected it.

Ahmadinejad’s position on the swap – which is the position of Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei as well as the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps – developed just as the Iranian president, in New York, publicly refused the US/European Union tactic of always bundling together nuclear weapons and use of nuclear energy in the same discussion. In a call that rang across the developing world, Ahmadinejad pulled no punches. He denounced the Security Council and the IAEA as being manipulated against non-nuclear states and expressly demanded the world to cease development of nuclear weapons and to ban production, storage, proliferation, maintenance and use of nuclear weapons.

Looks like the UN apparently was paying attention. Apparently. On Wednesday, the five permanent Security Council members, in a joint statement, supported the idea of making the Middle East a nuclear-weapons-free zone. That would let the (nuclear) cat out of the bag – forcing Israel to declare itself a nuclear power and join the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT). The chances of this happening under a Benjamin Netanyahu government are slim.

In fact, Washington paid only lip service to this nuclear-free wishful thinking because it is avidly courting the Arab vote to back up a Security Council fourth round of sanctions against Iran. It remains to be seen whether Arab states, mostly US clients, will be duped by this. They do want a nuclear-weapons-free Middle East for real, Israel included.

Egypt – which chairs the powerful 118-nation Non-Aligned Movement (NAM) – has circulated a proposal to the 189 signatories of the NPT calling for a conference by 2011 on turning the Middle East into a nuclear-weapons-free zone. Inevitably, the US is now trying to persuade Egypt to “soften” its tone and basically wait and see.

The non-aligned countries in the developing world, as well as the BRICs, may have understood the “real” danger behind the (non-existent) Iranian bomb: it is Israel’s behavior for decades that has carried the threat of a nuclear war in the Middle East, not a non-existent Iranian “bomb”.

And then there’s the ever-shifting sanctions front. What is now clear is what was already clear last month: no new sanctions before July, if at all. Both Russia and China are turning the US-drafted sanctions package into sand. BRIC member Brazil, alongside Turkey, the current non-veto power Security Council members, also don’t want sanctions.

All eyes now focus on the Brazil-Iran meeting late next week. If there’s a global politician that can breach the enormous divide between US/European aggressiveness and the military dictatorship of the mullahatariat, it is Lula. He’s from the West, he’s from the global south and he’s a hell of a charming negotiator. The time has come for a real nuclear samba.

Pepe Escobar is the author of Globalistan: How the Globalized World is Dissolving into Liquid War (Nimble Books, 2007) and Red Zone Blues: a snapshot of Baghdad during the surge. His new book, just out, is Obama does Globalistan (Nimble Books, 2009).

He may be reached at pepeasia@yahoo.com.

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US courts India in the Indian Ocean

Posted by seumasach on May 6, 2010

“whoever controlled the Rimland rules Eurasia; whoever rules Eurasia controls the destinies of the world”

So America’s attempt to control the world now rests entirely on the cooperation of India and her attempt exit the Afghanistan quagmire entirely on cooperation with Pakistan. Who can square that circle?

Balaji Chandramohan

Asia Times

6th May, 2010

At the end of the 10-day joint naval exercise Malabar 10, conducted between India and the United States in the Arabian Sea, it became clear the two countries would further cooperate in the Indian Ocean to counter the rise of China in the years to come. The naval war games were held from April 23 to May 2, with these being the 14th in a series of exercises that began in 1992 after the end of the Cold War.

Unlike last year, this month’s exercise was a bilateral rather than a multilateral affair. Countries that participated in the 2009 exercise were absent, including Singapore, Japan and Australia, leading to speculation these nations didn’t want to antagonize Beijing. The absence of the Quadrilateral Initiative (known as “Quad” or the “axis of democracy”) provides a glaring observation in the Malabar 10 exercise.

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Russian billions to save Ukraine

Posted by seumasach on May 5, 2010

Nikolai Troitsky

RAI  Novosti

4th May, 2010

The agreement on Russia’s Black Sea Fleet continues to be the subject of heated debate in both Russia and Ukraine. However, the concerns expressed by opposition parties and the public differ significantly in the two countries.

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Iran, Brazil and the ‘bomb’

Posted by seumasach on May 2, 2010

Pepe Escobar

Asia Times

30th April, 2010

Brazilian Foreign Minister Celso Amorim put it very politely at a joint press conference with his Iranian counterpart Manouchehr Mottaki in Tehran this Tuesday. Amorim said, “Brazil is interested to have a share in settling the Iranian nuclear issue in an appropriate way.”

“Appropriate” is code for dialogue – not a fourth round of sanctions slammed by the United Nations Security Council, much less the military option, which the Barack Obama administration has stridently kept on the table. Thus by positioning itself as a mediator in search for a peaceful solution, the Brazilian government is in fact on a “soft” collision course with the Obama administration.

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China breaks the Himalayan barrier

Posted by seumasach on May 2, 2010

M.K.Bhadrakumar

Asia Times

1st May, 2010

Two veteran diplomats, one from China and the other an American, trudge their weary way from their respective capitals to the remote Himalayan kingdom of Bhutan to witness as “observers” a gathering of eight leaders from South Asiaagonizing over the stasis of their 25-year old regional forum.

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‘Iran, Zimbabwe firm against bully’

Posted by seumasach on April 23, 2010

PressTV

23rd April, 2010

Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has criticized bullying powers for making attempts to deprive world nations of their inalienable rights.

“A number of bullying powers in the world have violated the rights of nations and have, for centuries, deprived them of their inalienable rights,” said Ahmadinejad on Friday at the opening ceremony of an international trade fair in Zimbabwe’s second largest city, Bulawayo.

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The flying Sikh and the peacenik

Posted by seumasach on April 16, 2010

“There is no way Indians can justify their failure to pursue an independent foreign policy. If they find themselves today sitting on the ground and telling “sad stories of the death of kings”, is it Obama who is at fault?

The existential angst in the Indian mind is in actuality nothing else than the experience of human freedom and responsibility. India is an emerging power in the world order and it cannot insist on living an inauthentic existence.”
M.K.Bhadrakumar

Asia Times

17th April, 2010

Senior Indian officials in their private briefing insist there was “almost a Zen-like spiritual quality” to the meeting between Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and United States President Barack Obama in Washington last Sunday. However, the question being posed by the Indian strategic community is still: “Does Obama care about India?”

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