Author Topic: US Foreign Policy & Geopolitics  (Read 432731 times)


Crafty_Dog

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George Friedman: The Chinese Mystery
« Reply #1501 on: September 19, 2023, 06:56:38 PM »

Hope he's right , , , What about the change of personel at the top of the nuke force?


===========September 19, 2023
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The Chinese Mystery
By: George Friedman

Chinese Defense Minister Li Shangfu has disappeared. Some reports say he was meeting with Vietnamese officials when he was escorted away, but according to other reliable reports, he was detained before the meeting and thus had to cancel it. Chinese sources report that he is under investigation for corruption. In addition to leading the Ministry of Defense, Li is one of China’s five state councilors, which makes him an extremely important figure outranking other ministers.

This follows the disappearance in June of Foreign Minister Qin Gang, who was later replaced by Wang Yi. His removal is still unexplained, but his strong anti-American rhetoric did not sit well with China’s need to mend relations with the U.S. and secure foreign capital. In addition, several senior economic and banking figures have been dismissed recently, although not with the calculated drama obviously intended to raise questions.

These incidents call to mind the removal of former Chinese President Hu Jintao from the closing ceremony of the 20th National Congress of the Chinese Communist Party last October. Hu’s removal was aired on television, while Li’s came at the last minute before a planned meeting with dignitaries from a country that China is trying to woo. China knew the impact these removals would have. Li and Qin were the two figures most responsible for Chinese foreign affairs – the former for national defense and the latter for politics. The world was startled. The Vietnamese are going to wonder whether a nation that treats its defense minister this way is stable enough to rely on. There are subtler ways to retire or arrest someone, but Beijing did not choose them. Clearly, China wanted both incidents to be noticed.

In a sense, a massive shakeup of the Chinese government is overdue, particularly if President Xi Jinping plans to keep his job. Xi took office in 2013, when the Chinese economy was surging and China’s strategic position was strengthening. There was in some circles a sense that China would surpass the United States in economic and military power. In the decade since, the Chinese economy has weakened dramatically, to the point that economic well-being at all levels of society has declined, without Xi taking effective steps to reverse the dip.

Related to this problem was the idea that China could surge its international and strategic power. Xi was obsessed with the United States, as many countries are for various reasons. He sought to create linkages to block the United States with programs like the Belt and Road Initiative, an economic plan in which economics was subordinate to national security. Xi positioned Belt and Road as the foundation of a fundamental shift in the balance of power, which failed. Simultaneously, China was challenging American naval power in the South China Sea, particularly around Taiwan.

Xi did not understand the degree to which China depended on the United States for its economic system. The United States was China’s number one source of exports, while U.S. investments and technology transfers anchored and drove China’s economic growth. Xi had positioned the United States as China’s main adversary for domestic and foreign reasons. Given past performance and ignoring the dynamic that was critical to China’s growth, China achieved its goal of being seen as the likely successor to the United States.

The problem that Xi had was that the United States took him seriously as well. Xi did not understand that the U.S. was built around economic cycles. As down cycles occurred, China would be affected, and as U.S. fear of China surged, a range of measures were implemented against China. Though the U.S. actions were not China’s primary problem, they were a significant complication. At the same time, China overestimated its naval development and technical capacity while seeming to underestimate U.S. capacities. The recent deepening of U.S. alliances with the Philippines and Papua New Guinea completed a line blocking China from the Aleutians to Australia, weakening Beijing’s strategic position significantly.

China is and will continue to be a significant country, but it is far from being able to challenge the United States. Xi miscalculated the importance of U.S. markets and capital and the willingness of the U.S. to deploy major force against China.

All this happened on Xi’s watch. He was superb at claiming premature victories in the domestic economy and global relations. He convinced the Chinese people of what he wanted them to believe. In such circumstances, a change of government would be inevitable and routine. But Xi is unable or unwilling to step aside. There may be conspiracies against him, and there are far more haunting his mind. He is hard-pressed to show that he knows their secrets and wields vast power, demonstrated by the arrest of high-ranking officials as publicly as possible. He is repeating the mistake that he made with the United States, convincing the Americans of China’s might and triggering a response that left China off balance to say the least. Xi’s enemies may well believe that he sees all and has the power to stop them, but that simply motivates them to be more effective. Xi can’t resign or admit failure. So ministers must disappear, and former presidents must be removed from meetings in sight of the world.

Crafty_Dog

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WRM: International Order quietly disintegrating
« Reply #1502 on: September 26, 2023, 01:25:27 PM »
The Rules-Based International Order Is Quietly Disintegrating
It hasn’t been this threatened since the 1930s.
Walter Russell Mead
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Walter Russell Mead
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Sept. 25, 2023 6:06 pm ET


The most important fact in world politics is that 19 months after Vladimir Putin challenged the so-called rules-based international order head-on by invading Ukraine, the defense of that order is not going well. The world is less stable today than in February 2022, the enemies of the order hammer away, the institutional foundations of the order look increasingly shaky, and Western leaders don’t yet seem to grasp the immensity of the task before them.

This isn’t just about the military threats to the international system in such places as Ukraine and the Taiwan Strait. Even as the global geopolitical crisis becomes more acute, the core institutions and initiatives of the American-led world order and the governments that back them are growing progressively weaker and less relevant.

The United Nations was supposed to be the crown jewel of the rules-based order, but lately the power and prestige of this perennial underperformer has sunk to new lows. Among the leaders of the five permanent members of the Security Council, only Joe Biden bothered to show up for the General Assembly last week. Emmanuel Macron was too busy welcoming King Charles III on an entirely ceremonial state visit to Paris. Apparently neither the British king nor the French president thought the U.N. important enough to affect his plans. U.K. Prime Minister Rishi Sunak blew off a letter from the heads of more than 100 international-development nongovernmental organizations urging him to attend, the first prime minister in a decade to skip the annual meeting.

Mr. Putin and China’s Xi Jinping also ditched the U.N. meeting, but they weren’t staying at home and washing their hair. Both ostentatiously demonstrated their contempt for Western norms by inviting international pariahs for high-profile visits. Just before the U.N. meeting, North Korea’s Kim Jong Un headed to a Russian space-launch site, where Mr. Putin courted him and both leaders bragged about their deepening relations. And during the General Assembly, Mr. Xi welcomed Syria’s beleaguered Bashar al-Assad to Hangzhou.

There was a time when people would have cared what the U.N. had to say about international crises ranging from the string of coups across Africa and the Azerbaijan-Armenia conflict to the alleged Indian involvement in the assassination of a Khalistan activist in Canada. Nobody today thinks that the deadlocked Security Council or the farcical General Assembly has a constructive role to play in these matters.


It isn’t only the United Nations. Messrs. Xi and Putin also ditched this month’s Group of 20 summit in New Delhi. Meantime, China was busy demonstrating its utter contempt for the World Court ruling against its “Nine-Dash line” territorial claims in the South China Sea. Beijing continues to develop military facilities on Mischief Reef, part of the internationally recognized Exclusive Economic Zone belonging to the Philippines, and increasingly polices its claimed maritime boundaries in defiance of Western protests.

The World Trade Organization is a shadow of its former self. As protectionist sentiment intensifies around the world, the WTO is largely toothless and voiceless. The Doha Round of trade talks collapsed years ago, and there is no prospect of a revival of the free-trade agenda that was an integral element of the rules-based order from the Bretton Woods negotiations during World War II on.

Arms-control and disarmament negotiations, another pillar of the rules-based order, are off the agenda. China has launched a massive nuclear buildup. Russia seems more interested in threatening the use of nuclear weapons in Ukraine than in disarmament. As Iran nears the nuclear threshold, the early signs of a proliferation cascade are visible in the Middle East. Mr. Kim’s trip to Russia signals the final collapse of U.S. attempts to constrain North Korea’s nuclear program through U.N. sanctions. South Korea, where a majority of voters favor developing nuclear weapons, is paying attention. The development of hypersonic missiles, cyber attacks and biological weapons persists, with no meaningful attempt to address these problems through multilateral institutions, arms talks or anything else this side of the law of the jungle.

States are imploding and the rule of law is disappearing across large parts of the world. In Latin America, narco-trafficking crime organizations have infiltrated or supplanted weak states. Something similar is happening in the Sahel, with jihadist groups and bandits openly defying the authority of shambolic governments. Russia, China and Iran are happily fishing in these troubled waters, with few signs of effective Western responses to a growing security threat. The ignominious collapse of French power across Africa has been more dramatic, but the palsied incompetence of American responses to the erosion of civil order among our own neighbors is at least equally disgraceful, and equally grave.

Threatened by powerful and relentless adversaries from without, undermined by political decadence and institutional decay from within, the rules-based international order has not been this imperiled since the 1930s.

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WRM: If Trump wins
« Reply #1503 on: October 05, 2023, 02:29:38 AM »
A ‘Trumpier’ Second-Term Foreign Policy
This time he’d hire people who agree with him, not seasoned establishment figures.
Walter Russell Mead
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Walter Russell Mead
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Oct. 2, 2023 6:14 pm ET




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Donald Trump speaks at a 2024 campaign rally in Dubuque, Iowa, Sept. 20. PHOTO: SCOTT MORGAN/REUTERS
Donald Trump has a historic lead in the Republican primary, and while November 2024 is a long 13 months away, national polls point to a close race that Mr. Trump could win. It is time to think about what a second Trump term would mean for American foreign policy. Thanks to his first-term record, his statements since leaving office, and the views of Trump associates and confidants such as Richard Grenell, Mr. Trump’s ambassador to Germany and acting director of national intelligence, it’s possible to discern what a MAGA 2.0 foreign policy might look like.

A second Trump term would almost certainly be “Trumpier” than the first. For much of his first term, Mr. Trump surrounded himself with well-known conservative foreign-policy figures and senior military leaders, often deferring to their advice. More experienced, more confident in his own judgment and less deferential to others’ expertise, Mr. Trump likely will fill senior positions with people who reflect rather than challenge his instincts and priorities.

There will be resistance from inside the government, but this time around it won’t come from senior officials, only from career civil servants in the Pentagon, State Department and the Treasury, aided by allies in the intelligence world. Expect explosive leaks, bureaucratic slow-walking and a permanent state of trench warfare in the government machine.

Mr. Trump’s talent for disruption will likely have larger and more lasting consequences in a second term than in the first. He has never been a supporter of the rules-based international order, and he attaches little importance to its institutions, from the United Nations to the North Atlantic Treaty Organization. He prefers transactional agreements with other powerful world leaders and considers his reputation for unpredictability one of his greatest assets in international affairs.

This makes him a disconcerting figure for American allies. On the one hand, threatening an American withdrawal from NATO to force such countries as Germany to honor their spending commitments is something Mr. Trump might very well try. On the other, he could surprise the world—and key American allies in Asia—by a willingness to seek some kind of grand bargain with Xi Jinping.

Ukraine policy is harder to predict. If the aid pipeline to Ukraine is already drying up because of congressional Republican opposition, by next spring President Volodymyr Zelensky may choose to open negotiations with Moscow well before the American election. In any case, even if a second Trump administration ends aid to Ukraine, Mr. Trump’s determination to increase American oil and gas production and boost military spending make a lasting reconciliation with Moscow unlikely.

READ MORE GLOBAL VIEW
The Rules-Based International Order Is Quietly DisintegratingSeptember 25, 2023
Climate Policy and World OrderSeptember 18, 2023
As India Rises, the G-20 Reveals a Shifting World OrderSeptember 11, 2023
Geographically, experienced Trump hands like Mr. Grenell suggest that the Western Hemisphere would be a major second-term focus. Re-establishing order on America’s southern border matters much, much more to Team Trump than the future of Crimea. Expect a mix of threats, promises and a willingness to dance with the devil (perhaps even the Maduro government in Venezuela) in a single-minded focus on addressing the migration crisis.

Climate policy will shift dramatically. Mr. Trump shares President Biden’s belief that “foreign policy for the middle class” entails large-scale federal intervention to protect American industry. But whereas Mr. Biden orients his massive program of industrial planning toward his climate-change goals, Mr. Trump will more likely intervene on behalf of fossil fuels, traditional heavy industry and the defense sector.

A second Trump term would see continuities as well. After grumbling and resistance, the Biden administration has embraced the essence of Mr. Trump’s approach to important leaders such as the crown prince of Saudi Arabia, the president of Turkey and the prime ministers of Israel and India. A brief but expensive era of name-calling and vainglorious human-rights posturing has been replaced by pragmatic bargaining. Trumpian indifference to human rights and democracy could also affect relations with governments like the military rulers of Myanmar.

For many decades, foreign governments have tried to curry favor in Washington through developing business relationships with friends, associates and at times relatives of American presidents.

The interest of many Trump associates in lucrative business arrangements is as well known overseas as Hunter Biden’s interest in “consulting.” The profoundly corrosive and damaging erosion of norms around presidential conflicts of interest will continue and perhaps accelerate in a second Trump term.

There is a final area of continuity that shouldn’t be ignored. Mr. Biden’s global strength has been constrained by international skepticism about the durability of his party’s hold on power. Similar doubts will dog Mr. Trump if he returns to the White House in 2025. The U.S. under Mr. Trump would remain deeply polarized, and foreigners would discount Mr. Trump’s promises and threats, as they have done Mr. Biden’s, to the degree that they believe that American policy will shift radically again in 2029.


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Former Sec Def Robert Gates
« Reply #1505 on: October 06, 2023, 10:43:26 AM »
https://www.foreignaffairs.com/united-states/robert-gates-america-china-russia-dysfunctional-superpower?utm_medium=newsletters&utm_source=twofa&utm_campaign=The%20Dysfunctional%20Superpower&utm_content=20231006&utm_term=FA%20This%20Week%20-%20112017

The Dysfunctional Superpower
Can a Divided America Deter China and Russia?
By Robert M. Gates
September 29, 2023

Isabel Seliger
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The United States now confronts graver threats to its security than it has in decades, perhaps ever. Never before has it faced four allied antagonists at the same time—Russia, China, North Korea, and Iran—whose collective nuclear arsenal could within a few years be nearly double the size of its own. Not since the Korean War has the United States had to contend with powerful military rivals in both Europe and Asia. And no one alive can remember a time when an adversary had as much economic, scientific, technological, and military power as China does today.

The problem, however, is that at the very moment that events demand a strong and coherent response from the United States, the country cannot provide one. Its fractured political leadership—Republican and Democratic, in the White House and in Congress—has failed to convince enough Americans that developments in China and Russia matter. Political leaders have failed to explain how the threats posed by these countries are interconnected. They have failed to articulate a long-term strategy to ensure that the United States, and democratic values more broadly, will prevail.

Chinese President Xi Jinping and Russian President Vladimir Putin have much in common, but two shared convictions stand out. First, each is convinced that his personal destiny is to restore the glory days of his country’s imperial past. For Xi, this means reclaiming imperial China’s once dominant role in Asia while harboring even greater ambitions for global influence. For Putin, it means pursuing an awkward mixture of reviving the Russian Empire and recapturing the deference that was accorded the Soviet Union. Second, both leaders are convinced that the developed democracies—above all, the United States—are past their prime and have entered an irreversible decline. This decline, they believe, is evident in these democracies’ growing isolationism, political polarization, and domestic disarray.

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Taken together, Xi’s and Putin’s convictions portend a dangerous period ahead for the United States. The problem is not merely China’s and Russia’s military strength and aggressiveness. It is also that both leaders have already made major miscalculations at home and abroad and seem likely to make even bigger ones in the future. Their decisions could well lead to catastrophic consequences for themselves—and for the United States. Washington must therefore change Xi’s and Putin’s calculus and reduce the chances of disaster, an effort that will require strategic vision and bold action. The United States prevailed in the Cold War thanks to a consistent strategy pursued by both political parties through nine successive presidencies. It needs a similar bipartisan approach today. Therein lies the rub.

The United States finds itself in a uniquely treacherous position: facing aggressive adversaries with a propensity to miscalculate yet incapable of mustering the unity and strength necessary to dissuade them. Successfully deterring leaders such as Xi and Putin depends on the certainty of commitments and constancy of response. Yet instead, dysfunction has made American power erratic and unreliable, practically inviting risk-prone autocrats to place dangerous bets—with potentially catastrophic effects.

XI’S AMBITIONS
Xi’s call for “the great rejuvenation of the Chinese nation” is shorthand for China becoming the dominant world power by 2049, the centenary of the Communists’ victory in the Chinese Civil War. That objective includes bringing Taiwan back under the control of Beijing. In his words, “The complete unification of the motherland must be realized, and it will be realized.” To that end, Xi has directed the Chinese military to be ready by 2027 to successfully invade Taiwan, and he has pledged to modernize the Chinese military by 2035 and turn it into a “world-class” force. Xi seems to believe that only by taking Taiwan can he secure for himself status comparable to Mao Zedong’s in the pantheon of Chinese Communist Party legends.

Xi’s aspirations and sense of personal destiny entail significant risk of war. Just as Putin has disastrously miscalculated in Ukraine, there is a considerable danger Xi will do so in Taiwan. He has already dramatically miscalculated at least three times. First, by departing from the Chinese leader Deng Xiaoping’s maxim of “hide your strength, bide your time,” Xi has provoked exactly the response Deng feared: the United States has mobilized its economic power to slow China’s growth, begun strengthening and modernizing its military, and bolstered its alliances and military partnerships in Asia. A second major miscalculation was Xi’s leftward swing in economic policies, an ideological shift that began in 2015 and was reinforced at the 2022 National Congress of the Chinese Communist Party. His policies, from inserting the party into the management of companies to increasingly relying on state-owned enterprises, have profoundly harmed China’s economy. Third, Xi’s “zero COVID” policy, as the economist Adam Posen has written in these pages, “made visible and tangible the CCP’s arbitrary power over everyone’s commercial activities, including those of the smallest players.” The resulting uncertainty, accentuated by his sudden reversal of that policy, has reduced Chinese consumer spending and thus further damaged the entire economy.

If preserving the power of the party is Xi’s first priority, taking Taiwan is his second. If China relies on measures short of war to pressure Taiwan to preemptively surrender, that effort will likely fail. And so Xi would be left with the option of risking war by imposing a full-scale naval blockade or even launching an all-out invasion to conquer the island. He may think he would be fulfilling his destiny by trying, but win or lose, the economic and military costs of provoking a war over Taiwan would be catastrophic for China, not to mention for everyone else involved. Xi would be making a monumental mistake.

Despite Xi’s miscalculations and his country’s many internal difficulties, China will continue to pose a formidable challenge to the United States. Its military is stronger than ever. China now boasts more warships than the United States (although they are of poorer quality). It has modernized and restructured both its conventional forces and its nuclear forces—and is nearly doubling its deployed strategic nuclear forces—and upgraded its command-and-control system. It is in the process of strengthening its capabilities in space and cyberspace, as well.


Xi’s sense of personal destiny entails significant risk of war.
Beyond its military moves, China has pursued a comprehensive strategy aimed at increasing its power and influence globally. China is now the top trading partner of more than 120 countries, including nearly all of those in South America. More than 140 countries have signed up as participants in the Belt and Road Initiative, China’s sprawling infrastructure development program, and China now owns, manages, or has invested in more than 100 ports in some 60 countries.

Complementing these widening economic relationships is a pervasive propaganda and media network. No country on earth is beyond the reach of at least one Chinese radio station, television channel, or online news site. Through these and other outlets, Beijing attacks American actions and motives, erodes faith in the international institutions the United States created after World War II, and trumpets the supposed superiority of its development and governance model—all while advancing the theme of Western decline.

There are at least two concepts invoked by those who think the United States and China are destined for conflict. One is “the Thucydides trap.” According to this theory, war is inevitable when a rising power confronts an established power, as when Athens confronted Sparta in antiquity or when Germany confronted the United Kingdom before World War I. Another is “peak China,” the idea that the country’s economic and military power is or will soon be at its strongest, while ambitious initiatives to strengthen the U.S. military will take years to bear fruit. Thus, China might well invade Taiwan before the military disparity in Asia changes China’s disadvantage.

But neither theory is convincing. There was nothing inevitable about World War I; it happened because of the stupidity and arrogance of Europe’s leaders. And the Chinese military itself is far from ready for a major conflict. Thus, a direct Chinese attack on or invasion of Taiwan, if it happens at all, is some years in the future. Unless, of course, Xi grievously miscalculates—again.

PUTIN’S GAMBLE
“Without Ukraine, Russia ceases to be an empire,” Zbigniew Brzezinski, the political scientist and former U.S. national security adviser, once observed. Putin certainly shares that view. In pursuit of Russia’s lost empire, he invaded Ukraine in 2014 and again in 2022—with the latter adventure turning out to be a catastrophic miscalculation with devastating long-term consequences for his country. Rather than dividing and weakening NATO, Russia’s actions have given the alliance new purpose (and, in Finland and, soon, Sweden, powerful new members). Strategically, Russia is far worse off now than it was before the invasion.

Economically, oil sales to China, India, and other states have offset much of the financial impact of sanctions, and consumer goods and technology from China, Turkey, and other countries in Central Asia and the Middle East have partly replaced those once imported from the West. Still, Russia has been subjected to extraordinary sanctions by virtually all developed democracies. Countless Western firms have pulled their investments and abandoned the country, including the oil and gas companies whose technology is essential to sustain Russia’s primary source of income. Thousands of young tech experts and entrepreneurs have fled. In invading Ukraine, Putin has mortgaged his country’s future.



A broadcast of Chinese military drills, Beijing, August 2023
Tingshu Wang / Reuters
As for Russia’s military, even though the war has significantly degraded its conventional forces, Moscow retains the largest nuclear arsenal in the world. Thanks to arms control agreements, that arsenal includes only a few more deployed strategic nuclear weapons than what the United States has. But Russia has ten times as many tactical nuclear weapons—about 1,900.

This large nuclear arsenal notwithstanding, the prospects for Putin seem grim. With his hopes for a quick conquest of Ukraine dashed, he appears to be counting on a rough military stalemate to exhaust the Ukrainians, betting that by next spring or summer, the public in Europe and the United States will tire of sustaining them. As a temporary alternative to a conquered Ukraine, he may be willing to consider a crippled Ukraine—a rump state that lies in ruins, its exports slashed and its foreign aid dramatically reduced. Putin wanted Ukraine as part of a reconstituted Russian Empire; he also feared a democratic, modern, and prosperous Ukraine as an alternative model for Russians next door. He will not get the former, but he may believe he can prevent the latter.

As long as Putin is in power, Russia will remain an adversary of the United States and NATO. Through arms sales, security assistance, and discounted oil and gas, he is cultivating new relationships in Africa, the Middle East, and Asia. He will continue to use all means at his disposal to sow division in the United States and Europe and undermine U.S. influence in the global South. Emboldened by his partnership with Xi and confident that his modernized nuclear arsenal will deter military action against Russia, he will continue to aggressively challenge the United States. Putin has already made one historic miscalculation; no one can be sure he will not make another.

AMERICA IMPAIRED
For now, the United States would seem to be in a strong position vis-à-vis both China and Russia. Above all, the U.S. economy is doing well. Business investment in new manufacturing facilities, some of it subsidized by new government infrastructure and technology programs, is booming. New investments by both government and business in artificial intelligence, quantum computing, robotics, and bioengineering promise to widen the technological and economic gap between the United States and every other country for years to come.

Diplomatically, the war in Ukraine has handed the United States new opportunities. The early warning that Washington gave its friends and allies about Russia’s intention to invade Ukraine restored their faith in U.S. intelligence capabilities. Renewed fears of Russia have allowed the United States to strengthen and expand NATO, and the military aid it has given Ukraine has provided clear evidence that it can be trusted to fulfill its commitments. Meanwhile, China’s economic and diplomatic bullying in Asia and Europe has backfired, enabling the United States to strengthen its relationships in both regions.

The U.S. military has been healthily funded in recent years, and modernization programs are underway in all three legs of the nuclear triad—intercontinental ballistic missiles, bombers, and submarines. The Pentagon is buying new combat aircraft (F-35s, modernized F-15s, and a new, sixth-generation fighter), along with a new fleet of tanker aircraft for in-flight refueling. The army is procuring some two dozen new platforms and weapons, and the navy is building additional ships and submarines. The military continues to develop new kinds of weapons, such as hypersonic munitions, and strengthen its offensive and defensive cyber-capabilities. All told, the United States spends more on defense than the next ten countries combined, including Russia and China.

Sadly, however, America’s political dysfunction and policy failures are undermining its success. The U.S. economy is threatened by runaway federal government spending. Politicians from both parties have failed to address the spiraling cost of entitlements such as Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid. Perennial opposition to raising the debt ceiling has undermined confidence in the economy, causing investors to worry about what would happen if Washington actually defaulted. (In August 2023, the ratings agency Fitch downgraded the United States’ credit rating, raising borrowing costs for the government.) The appropriations process in Congress has been broken for years. Legislators have repeatedly failed to enact individual appropriations bills, passed gigantic “omnibus” laws that no one has read, and forced government shutdowns.


As long as Putin is in power, Russia will remain a U.S. adversary.
Diplomatically, former President Donald Trump’s disdain for U.S. allies, his fondness for authoritarian leaders, his willingness to sow doubt about the United States’ commitment to its NATO allies, and his generally erratic behavior undermined U.S. credibility and respect across the globe. But just seven months into the administration of President Joe Biden, the United States’ abrupt, disastrous withdrawal from Afghanistan further damaged the rest of the world’s confidence in Washington.

For years, U.S. diplomacy has neglected much of the global South, the central front for nonmilitary competition with China and Russia. The United States’ ambassadorships are disproportionately left vacant in this part of the world. Beginning in 2022, after years of neglect, the United States scrambled to revive its relationships with Pacific island nations—but only after China had taken advantage of Washington’s absence to sign security and economic agreements with these countries. The competition with China and even Russia for markets and influence is global. The United States cannot afford to be absent anywhere.

The military also pays a price for American political dysfunction—particularly in Congress. Every year since 2010, Congress has failed to approve appropriations bills for the military before the start of the next fiscal year. Instead, legislators have passed a “continuing resolution,” which allows the Pentagon to spend no more money than it did the previous year and prohibits it from starting anything new or increasing spending on existing programs. These continuing resolutions govern defense spending until a new appropriations bill can be passed, and they have lasted from a few weeks to an entire fiscal year. The result is that each year, imaginative new programs and initiatives go nowhere for an unpredictable period.

The Budget Control Act of 2011 put in place automatic spending cuts, known as “sequestration,” and reduced the federal budget by $1.2 trillion over ten years. The military, which then accounted for only about 15 percent of federal expenditures, was forced to absorb half that cut—$600 billion. With personnel costs exempted, the bulk of the reductions had to come from maintenance, operations, training, and investment accounts. The consequences were severe and long-lasting. And yet as of September 2023, Congress is headed toward making the same mistake again. A further example of Congress letting politics do real harm to the military is allowing one senator to block confirmation of hundreds of senior officers for months on end, not only seriously degrading readiness and leadership but also—by highlighting American governmental dysfunction in such a critical area—making the United States a laughingstock among its adversaries. The bottom line is that the United States needs more military power to meet the threats it faces, but both Congress and the Executive Branch are rife with obstacles to achieving that objective.

MEETING THE MOMENT
The epic contest between the United States and its allies on one side and China, Russia, and their fellow travelers on the other is well underway. To ensure that Washington is in the strongest possible position to deter its adversaries from making additional strategic miscalculations, U.S. leaders must first address the breakdown in the decades-long bipartisan agreement with respect to the United States’ role in the world. It is not surprising that after 20 years of war in Afghanistan and Iraq, many Americans wanted to turn inward, especially given the United States’ many problems at home. But it is the job of political leaders to counter that sentiment and explain how the country’s fate is inextricably bound up in what happens elsewhere. President Franklin Roosevelt once observed that “the greatest duty of a statesman is to educate.” But recent presidents, along with most members of Congress, have utterly failed in this essential responsibility.

Americans need to understand why U.S. global leadership, despite its costs, is vital to preserving peace and prosperity. They need to know why a successful Ukrainian resistance to the Russian invasion is crucial for deterring China from invading Taiwan. They need to know why Chinese domination of the Western Pacific endangers U.S. interests. They need to know why Chinese and Russian influence in the global South matters to American pocketbooks. They need to know why the United States’ dependability as an ally is so consequential for preserving peace. They need to know why a Chinese-Russian alliance threatens the United States. These are the kinds of connections that American political leaders need to be drawing every day.

It is not just one Oval Office address or speech on the floor of Congress that is needed. Rather, a drumbeat of repetition is required for the message to sink in. Beyond regularly communicating to the American people directly, and not through spokespersons, the president needs to spend time over drinks and dinners and in small meetings with members of Congress and the media making the case for the United States’ leadership role. Then, given the fragmented nature of modern-day communications, members of Congress need to carry the message to their constituents across the country.



Putin addressing Russian military units, Moscow, June 2023
Sergei Guneev / Reuters
What is that message? It is that American global leadership has provided 75 years of great-power peace—the longest stretch in centuries. Nothing in a nation’s life is costlier than war, nor does anything else represent a greater threat to its security and prosperity. And nothing makes war likelier than putting one’s head in the sand and pretending that the United States is not affected by events elsewhere, as the country learned before World War I, World War II, and 9/11. The military power the United States possesses, the alliances it has forged, and the international institutions it has designed are all essential to deterring aggression against it and its partners. As a century of evidence should make clear, failing to deal with aggressors only encourages more aggression. It is naive to believe that Russian success in Ukraine will not lead to further Russian aggression in Europe and possibly even a war between NATO and Russia. And it is equally naive to believe that Russian success in Ukraine will not significantly increase the likelihood of Chinese aggression against Taiwan and thus potentially a war between the United States and China.

A world without reliable U.S. leadership would be a world of authoritarian predators, with all other countries potential prey. If America is to safeguard its people, its security, and its liberty, it must continue to embrace its global leadership role. As British Prime Minister Winston Churchill said of the United States in 1943, “The price of greatness is responsibility.”

Rebuilding support at home for that responsibility is essential to rebuilding trust among allies and awareness among adversaries that the United States will fulfill its commitments. Because of domestic divisions, mixed messages, and political leaders’ ambivalence about the United States’ role in the world, there is significant doubt abroad about American reliability. Both friends and adversaries wonder whether Biden’s engagement and alliance-building is a return to normal or whether Trump’s “America first” disdain for allies will be the dominant thread in American policy in the future. Even the closest of allies are hedging their bets about America. In a world where Russia and China are on the prowl, that is particularly dangerous.

Restoring public support for U.S. global leadership is the highest priority, but the United States must take other steps to actually exercise that role. First, it needs to go beyond “pivoting” to Asia. Strengthening relationships with Australia, Japan, the Philippines, South Korea, and other countries in the region is necessary but not sufficient. China and Russia are working together against U.S. interests on every continent. Washington needs a strategy for dealing with the entire world—particularly in Africa, Latin America, and the Middle East, where the Russians and the Chinese are fast outpacing the United States in developing security and economic relationships. This strategy ought not to divide the world into democracies and authoritarians. The United States must always advocate for democracy and human rights everywhere, but that commitment must not blind Washington to the reality that U.S. national interests sometimes require it to work with repressive, unrepresentative governments.


China and Russia think the future belongs to them.
Second, the United States’ strategy must incorporate all the instruments of its national power. Both Republicans and Democrats have grown hostile to trade agreements, and protectionist sentiment runs strong in Congress. This has left the field open for the Chinese in the global South, which offers huge markets and investment opportunities. Despite the Belt and Road Initiative’s flaws, such as the enormous debt it piles on recipient countries, Beijing has successfully used it to insinuate China’s influence, companies, and economic tentacles into scores of countries. Enshrined in the Chinese constitution in 2017, it is not going away. The United States and its allies need to figure out how to compete with the initiative in ways that play to their strengths—above all, their private sectors. U.S. development assistance programs add up to a small fraction of the Chinese effort. They are also fragmented and disconnected from larger U.S. geopolitical objectives. And even where U.S. aid programs are successful, the United States maintains a priestly silence about its accomplishments. It has said little, for example, about Plan Colombia, an aid program designed to combat the Colombian drug trade, or the President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief, which saved millions of lives in Africa.

Public diplomacy is essential to promoting U.S. interests, but Washington has let this important instrument of power wither since the end of the Cold War. Meanwhile, China is spending billions of dollars around the world to advance its narrative. Russia also has an aggressive effort to spread its propaganda and disinformation, as well as incite discord in and among democracies. The United States needs a strategy for influencing foreign leaders and publics—especially in the global South. To succeed, this strategy would require the U.S. government not merely to spend more money but also to integrate and synchronize its many disparate communications activities.

Security assistance to foreign governments is another area in need of radical change. Although the U.S. military does a good job training foreign forces, it makes piecemeal decisions about where and how to do so without sufficiently considering regional strategies or how better to partner with allies. Russia has increasingly provided security assistance to governments in Africa, especially those with an authoritarian bent, but the United States has no effective strategy to counter this effort. Washington must also figure out a way to accelerate the delivery of military equipment to recipient states. There is now a roughly $19 billion backlog of weapons sales to Taiwan, with delays ranging from four to ten years. Although the holdup is the result of many factors, an important cause is the limited production capacity of the U.S. defense industry.



U.S. Marines in the Baltic Sea, September 2023
Janis Laizans / Reuters
Third, the United States must rethink its nuclear strategy in the face of a Chinese-Russian alliance. Cooperation between Russia, which is modernizing its strategic nuclear force, and China, which is vastly expanding its once small force, tests the credibility of the U.S. nuclear deterrent—as do North Korea’s expanding nuclear capabilities and Iran’s weapons potential. To reinforce its deterrent, the United States almost certainly needs to adapt its strategy and probably needs to expand the size of its nuclear forces, as well. The Chinese and Russian navies are increasingly exercising together, and it would be surprising if they were not also more closely coordinating their deployed strategic nuclear forces.

There is broad agreement in Washington that the U.S. Navy needs many more warships and submarines. Again, the contrast between politicians’ rhetoric and action is stark. For a number of years, the shipbuilding budget was basically flat, but in recent years, even as the budget has increased substantially, continuing resolutions and execution problems have prevented the navy’s expansion. The main obstacles to a bigger navy are budgetary: the lack of sustained higher funding to the navy itself and, more broadly, underinvestment in shipyards and in industries that support shipbuilding and ship maintenance. Even so, it is difficult to discern any sense of urgency among politicians for remedying these problems anytime soon. That is unacceptable.

Finally, Congress must change the way it appropriates money for the Defense Department, and the Defense Department must change the way it spends that money. Congress needs to act more quickly and efficiently when it comes to approving the defense budget. That means, above all, passing military appropriations bills before the start of the fiscal year, a change that would give the Defense Department badly needed predictability. The Pentagon, for its part, must fix its sclerotic, parochial, and bureaucratic acquisition processes, which are especially anachronistic in an era when agility, flexibility, and speed matter more than ever. Leaders in the Defense Department have said the right things about these defects and announced many initiatives to correct them. Effective and urgent execution is the challenge.

LESS TALK, MORE ACTION
China and Russia think the future belongs to them. For all the tough rhetoric coming from the U.S. Congress and the Executive Branch about pushing back against these adversaries, there is surprisingly little action. Too often, new initiatives are announced, only for funding and actual implementation to move slowly or fail to materialize altogether. Talk is cheap, and no one in Washington seems ready to make the urgent changes needed. That is especially puzzling, since at a time of bitter partisanship and polarization in Washington, Xi and Putin have managed to forge impressive, if fragile, bipartisan support among policymakers for a strong U.S. response to their aggression. The Executive Branch and Congress have a rare opportunity to work together to back up their rhetoric about countering China and Russia with far-reaching actions that make the United States a significantly more formidable adversary and might help deter war.

Xi and Putin, cocooned by yes men, have already made serious errors that have cost their countries dearly. In the long run, they have damaged their countries. For the foreseeable future, however, they remain a danger that the United States must deal with. Even in the best of worlds—one in which the U.S. government had a supportive public, energized leaders, and a coherent strategy—these adversaries would pose a formidable challenge. But the domestic scene today is far from orderly: the American public has turned inward; Congress has descended into bickering, incivility, and brinkmanship; and successive presidents have either disavowed or done a poor job explaining America’s global role. To contend with such powerful, risk-prone adversaries, the United States needs to up its game in every dimension. Only then can it hope to deter Xi and Putin from making more bad bets. The peril is real.

DougMacG

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Middle East is quiet, said US Natl Security Adviser
« Reply #1506 on: October 09, 2023, 05:42:43 AM »
https://www.realclearpolitics.com/video/2023/10/08/watch_national_security_advisor_sullivan_said_mideast_is_quieter_than_any_time_since_911_--_eight_days_before_massive_hamas_attack.html

Bragging about Middle East being quiet under their watch 8 days prior did not age well.

Nor did our cash payment and easing of sanctions on Iran, financing this war on Israel to the tune of $60B.

"Terror emboldened and financed." 

Put that with your Biden Harris Obama bumper stickers.
« Last Edit: October 09, 2023, 06:32:30 AM by DougMacG »

ya

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Re: US Foreign Policy & Geopolitics
« Reply #1507 on: October 09, 2023, 06:33:45 AM »
US would love to take out Iran, on the pretext of their role in supporting Hamas. However, Iran controls the Hormuz strait. Oil could go up to $200, the US SPR is low, elections are near. Biden is in a bind.


DougMacG

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Re: Former Sec Def Robert Gates
« Reply #1508 on: October 09, 2023, 07:04:45 AM »
"Can a Divided America Deter China and Russia?"

To answer his title question, no.

Can an America united under principles of appeasement and isolation deter them?  Also no.

How about an America united under a strong, popular leader, with a strong economy, a strong defense, and strong commitment to deter tyrannical expansion?  That might be worth a try.
« Last Edit: October 09, 2023, 07:07:47 AM by DougMacG »

Crafty_Dog

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China wants Russia to lose?
« Reply #1509 on: October 13, 2023, 05:46:09 AM »


Crafty_Dog

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Ben Rhodes
« Reply #1513 on: October 14, 2023, 11:28:41 PM »
https://news.yahoo.com/ben-rhodes-u-telling-israel-015932629.html

I can only hope this guy is NEVER near another White House ever again.










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The Geopolitics of the Israeli/Hamas War
« Reply #1514 on: October 16, 2023, 12:56:51 PM »
This could likely be filed more that one place. I will be quite surprised if A 10s do hit Hamas targets, but would give the Biden admin grudging points if that occurs:

https://weapons.substack.com/p/big-power-involvement-in-the-gaza?r=1qo1e&utm_campaign=post&utm_medium=web&fbclid=IwAR0CkyijXBciegC_4ZD3WpZAZ5dfIWMlQibU4FTsd2gL7XqHcscViSYqQuQ

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Re: The Geopolitics of the Israeli/Hamas War
« Reply #1515 on: October 16, 2023, 02:19:53 PM »
"would give the Biden admin grudging points if that occurs"


  - We take considerable pride in giving people like Biden credit when deserved and ripping or correcting our own side when wrong.  Wish the MSM would do that.

Crafty_Dog

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Re: US Foreign Policy & Geopolitics
« Reply #1516 on: October 17, 2023, 12:50:42 PM »
"  - We take considerable pride in giving people like Biden credit when deserved and ripping or correcting our own side when wrong.  Wish the MSM would do that."

YES.

I am seeing some efforts by some at FOX to praise Biden's strong words, but so far IMHO Biden's words in important aspects are but Kabuki theater -- where is holding Iran to account?  What about Biden lifting oil sanctions ($40B?!?) and the $6B and pardoning the Iranian spies?

Body-by-Guinness

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Who Knew What When?
« Reply #1517 on: October 18, 2023, 09:12:14 AM »
This piece speaks to Crafty's questions in the post above, and asks who in Washington knew about the Israeli attacks, when did they know it, and was that info concealed so as to not upset any Irani apple carts:

https://www.tabletmag.com/sections/israel-middle-east/articles/biden-administration-tries-hide-knew-impending-massacre-leaving-iran-untouched-hamas-lee-smith?fbclid=IwAR2teIvtIEYdnMCX8MT_jWON5C7rJSKNw5y9BuU9v79Bw6CI16Fof3Vre0k

Crafty_Dog

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Pentagon has fallen into an existential trap
« Reply #1518 on: October 24, 2023, 03:32:27 AM »
Pasting this here on behalf of BBG.

https://johnhelmer.org/the-existential-trap-the-pentagon-has-just-fallen-into-it-as-biden-tries-to-avoid-carters-hostage-rescue-disaster/#more-71116

I would note that I have been predicting this fustercluck in which we find ourselves for quite some time now.

Crafty_Dog

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George Friedman: Russia, Ukraine, and thinking extreme thoughts
« Reply #1519 on: October 24, 2023, 03:46:08 AM »
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October 24, 2023
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Russia, Ukraine and Thinking Extreme Thoughts
By: George Friedman
In a recent article, I wrote that the war in Ukraine is over, but nobody knows how to end it. What I meant by that was that the general outline of the military aspects of the war is locked in, and the conflict is contained. The war was started by the Russians, who wanted to take control of Ukraine to create a buffer zone that would prevent the United States and Ukraine from threatening Russia. The United States intervened by sending weapons to Ukraine to block a Russian advance that could threaten NATO and Western Europe. The Ukrainians wanted to block the Russians from taking any territory from their homeland.

The war was part of a series of defensive moves by Russia, the United States and Ukraine, with each more offensive and dangerous than the last. The Russian thrust failed to break the Ukrainians and the Americans. Their defensive capabilities, coupled with their fear of defeat, blunted the Russian advance. The Russians’ fear prevented them from abandoning their constant efforts to disrupt the defenses.

The Russians are not, in my opinion, breaking their enemies. At the same time, the Ukrainians will not be able to break the Russians, in part because the improbability of success will limit any attack, and because the United States, having succeeded in blocking threats to its interest, has little will to sustain the battle. This would seem to impose the endgame on all sides, but the matter is more complex.

Any settlement not emanating from the total defeat of one side would have to address the root cause of the war, which was Russia's fear of a future attack. Russia would have to be induced to a deal by both the realization of the improbability of military success and some reduction of its sense of vulnerability via the annexation of a significant part of Ukraine, but far from all of it. The problem for Ukraine is that such a settlement could serve merely as an interlude until Russia refreshes its force and resumes the attack. Ukraine cannot be certain of U.S. military support at a later date and therefore would face a difficult military situation.

In a war that ends without the total defeat of one side, the fear is that any settlement would simply be a prelude to a renewed conflict and defeat down the road. The Russian view would be that any cession of land would be insufficient. The Ukrainians fear that the cession of land would make Russia far more dangerous, and the Americans would be afraid of endless war causing domestic resistance and vulnerability to other threats.

In examining what appears to be a hopeless situation, we need to consider Russia’s non-military needs. The Soviet Union was impoverished, and its military position was not as strong as many thought. Its fall left Russia in a similar position. There was no radical solution. Russia needs to rectify this situation at a time when its military weakness is even clearer. For Russia, turning itself into a nation that is in the first rank economically is fundamental. Using military force to achieve this hasn’t worked.

The United States faces a choice between ongoing war or effectively capitulating to Russia. Russia’s fear of attack coincides with the reality that the United States intends to cripple Russia economically. In supporting Ukraine, that is clearly Washington’s intent, but before the war, the U.S. approach was more like indifference. After World War II, the United States took an almost economic track toward its former enemies. Rather than breaking the Japanese and German nations, something that would have been quite rational, the United States undertook programs of reconstruction, enabling both Japan and West Germany to emerge as world-leading economic powers.

The Americans understood after the treatment of Germany following World War I that trying to crush a nation could cost the United States and the world a great deal, whereas rehabilitating the defeated helped to avoid wars of revenge while enhancing the global economic system. It also opened the door to military and political alliances. West Germany joined NATO, and Japan became a long-term American ally.

I have tried to show that the war has ended – in the sense that no one is in a position to achieve their goal – but that a peace settlement that sustains itself is extremely difficult. If the United States follows the World War II model in which, rather than demanding surrender, which is not possible for Moscow, it focuses on a relationship based on rebuilding rather than destroying Russia, it might withdraw from a war that is over, while the Russians might pursue their economic interest: developing an economy that places them in the top rank of nations.

Russia is filled with valuable natural resources, a workforce that requires training and an industrial plant that needs rebuilding. This would not be a government project beyond some encouragement, but an investment opportunity. The U.S. government did not create Toyota or Daimler-Benz. The strategy humanized barbaric enemies.

I am not by any means a pacifist, nor am I given to heartwarming fantasies. What I am doing is facing the fact that the United States is involved in a war that will not yield to common sense because of the reasonable fears of all sides. And I am reaching back to the lessons of World War II and how the U.S. treated its defeated enemies. Russia is not defeated and has the power to continue the war, even if it does not win. This is not in America’s interest, but turning Russia from an insecure enemy to an investment opportunity would be. And, of course, U.S. troops would remain in Europe for now, if needed.

There is nothing idealistic in this. It is simply the way American wars tend to end. Therefore, it is intended as a solution in the national interest. Whether it will be followed or anyone will agree is uncertain, but the question is: How many years is a war in gridlock worth?

Crafty_Dog

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Are you fg kidding me?!?
« Reply #1520 on: October 25, 2023, 07:52:40 PM »
WRM surprises to the downside with this one.

=====================================


Can China Help in the Middle East?
It is a more formidable potential adversary than Russia or Iran but shares interests with the U.S.

Walter Russell Mead
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Walter Russell Mead
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Oct. 25, 2023 6:14 pm ET




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imageNational security adviser Jake Sullivan and Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi in Malta, Sept. 16. PHOTO: LIAN YI/XINHUA/ASSOCIATED PRESS


As Team Biden contemplates the ruins of its Middle East diplomacy and scrambles to throw more U.S. military assets into the region in the hope of deterring Iran, it is looking to an unlikely partner. China’s Foreign Minister Wang Yi will be in Washington this week for talks with Secretary of State Antony Blinken and White House national security adviser Jake Sullivan.



Mr. Wang’s visit was originally part of a diplomatic process preparing the way for a trip by President Xi Jinping to next month’s Asia-Pacific economic summit in San Francisco. But as Mr. Blinken underlined in remarks to the United Nations Security Council on Tuesday, America wants help from China to prevent a wider war in the Middle East.



It isn’t a totally crazy idea. China imports a lot of Middle Eastern oil, and supply shortfalls and price hikes won’t help a Chinese economy struggling with the collapse of its real-estate market and a potential financial crisis. If China does want to play a major role, it is well prepared to do so. Because of a planned handover between China’s 44th and 45th naval escort task forces in the People’s Liberation Army Navy, both forces are currently active in the Persian Gulf, making Beijing, temporarily, the leading naval presence in the strategic waterway.



MARC:  WELL, THAT IS A HELLUVA COINCIDENCE!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!



On paper, Team Biden and Team Xi seem to want pretty much the same things in the Middle East. China’s envoy Zhai Jun is touring the Middle East, Chinese state media reports, to promote dialogue, achieve a cease-fire and restore peace, as well as to promote a two-state solution. That sounds a lot like what Mr. Blinken says.



The outreach to China over the Middle East comes amid other signs of a warming trend in Sino-American relations. Since Messrs. Sullivan and Wang met last spring in Vienna, the American secretaries of state, Treasury and commerce and climate envoy John Kerry have all visited Beijing. Messrs. Sullivan and Wang reunited in Malta last month. Mr. Xi himself sent a friendly message that was read at the Oct. 24 dinner in New York of the National Committee on U.S.-China Relations. He called the U.S.-China relationship crucial to the world and expressed Chinese willingness to cooperate with the U.S. to respond to global challenges.



Turning to China for help in the Middle East would be a shift from the Biden administration’s initial foreign policy. Its early goal was to park Russia and pacify Iran to concentrate America’s economic, diplomatic and military assets on the greater threat of a rising China. Potentially, the new policy could be exactly the opposite: an attempt to park China to focus more effectively on Russia and Iran.




From the standpoint of a rattled administration frantically trying to respond to a string of unanticipated events, there’s a lot to be said for working with Beijing. China, while a more formidable potential adversary than Russia or Iran, has common interests with the U.S. that the two more radical adversaries lack. Both China and America like global economic stability and quiet in the Middle East. Both countries benefit from a world that is open to commerce and investment.



Team Biden’s experiences with a world in flames and Team Xi’s worries about China’s economic problems are probably concentrating minds in Washington and Beijing about options for at least a period of détente.



One hopes for the best, but as the Biden administration has learned, parking adversaries is harder than it looks. China doesn’t want the Middle East consumed in a regional war that causes a global energy crisis, but it does want to break American power in the region. President Obama turned to Russia to bail him out of his embarrassing predicament after he blew off his own red line against Syria’s use of chemical weapons in its civil war.



Russia duly “cooperated” by collecting at least some of Syria’s chemical-weapons stockpile, but the price to American power and prestige was far higher than Mr. Obama understood. To this day, the position Russia gained in Syria by “helping” Mr. Obama is a major factor in the destabilization of the region and the growing danger to American allies.


The Biden administration has pursued a largely effective anti-China policy.  (MARC: ?!?!?!?)  It has fostered alignments among America’s regional allies, imposed severe constraints on China’s access to cutting-edge technologies, and pressured European allies to stiffen their posture toward Beijing.


These moves, one suspects, haven’t inspired China’s leaders with much affection for President Biden or a desire to support his re-election. And opposition to the U.S.-based world system lies deep in the DNA of the Chinese Communist Party. Mr. Xi seems influenced by the party’s most hard-line and totalitarian elements.


Rescuing Mr. Biden from a pickle in the Middle East may not be all that high on Mr. Xi’s priorities. More likely, China hopes that a weakened America, facing a cascade of international threats, torn by internal polarization and dissension, and heading for a contentious election is losing its ability to manage international crises.


Having seen how great a price Team Biden has been willing to pay in trying to park Russia and Iran and how slow Washington has been to grasp the adversarial nature of these relationships, the Chinese may be tempted to toy with the administration as Vladimir Putin and Iran did, pocketing more concessions for an agreement that never quite comes.


There is only one thing we can be sure of. The hungrier Team Biden looks, the more expensive China’s “help” will be.


DougMacG

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Re: Are you fg kidding me?!?
« Reply #1521 on: October 26, 2023, 07:02:27 AM »
Our trusted partners, the Chinese.

How is their reputation handling the Muslim population?

From the article:
"On paper, Team Biden and Team Xi seem to want pretty much the same things in the Middle East. China’s envoy Zhai Jun is touring the Middle East, Chinese state media reports, to promote dialogue, achieve a cease-fire and restore peace, as well as to promote a two-state solution. That sounds a lot like what Mr. Blinken says."


Is that what WE want?

Something is wrong with this picture.

Mead closes with this:
"There is only one thing we can be sure of. The hungrier Team Biden looks, the more expensive China’s “help” will be."

I think he gets it; this is a very bad idea.



Crafty_Dog

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Re: US Foreign Policy & Geopolitics
« Reply #1522 on: October 26, 2023, 07:27:58 AM »
"Because of a planned handover between China’s 44th and 45th naval escort task forces in the People’s Liberation Army Navy, both forces are currently active in the Persian Gulf, making Beijing, temporarily, the leading naval presence in the strategic waterway."

WELL, THAT IS A HELLUVA COINCIDENCE!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!  Indeed, one might very plausibly infer that Xi encouraged Iran to have Hamas act at this very moment-- as our Eisenhower Carrier group steams towards the waters south of Iran.


Crafty_Dog

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Re: US Foreign Policy & Geopolitics
« Reply #1523 on: October 31, 2023, 07:06:55 AM »
   
Hints, Bluffs and Uncertainty
By: George Friedman
The practice of foreign policy, like many other practices, consists of hints and bluffs amid uncertainty. There’s value in making the worthless seem invaluable and the baffling appear to be self-evident. And yet there were several events in the past week that signal things that I, at least, can’t quite fathom.

First, U.S. President Joe Biden is going to China to meet with Chinese President Xi Jinping. I’m not sure what he expects to achieve and therefore unsure why he’s going. But he’s the president of the United States, and I’ll allow that he must know something that makes him think the trip worthwhile. Still, China’s foreign minister – the one who replaced the one who disappeared – said that the meeting will be contentious. Given that China’s economy is fragile and that its military position was weakened by a U.S.-Philippines agreement earlier this year, China is signaling that the meeting will require American sincerity.

American sincerity is in short supply always but particularly when China is trying to bluff. China needs U.S. imports and investment, and more frankly, it needs the U.S. to have a weaker strategic position. Since that isn’t going to happen anytime soon, the remaining option is to pretend that the U.S. is the one in need.

Meanwhile, an interesting statement was issued in Belarus, a place where interesting things rarely emerge. Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko said that the war in Ukraine is at an end, and that neither Ukraine nor Russia has the ability to defeat the other. Each side must accept this reality, he said, and should negotiate an end to the conflict.

Recall that Lukashenko owes his position to Russian President Vladimir Putin, who intervened on his behalf after nationwide protests broke out over what was widely regarded as a sham election. Recall, too, that Lukashenko gave sanctuary to many in the Wagner Group after its failed insurrection, apparently with Putin’s blessing. Put simply, Lukashenko is Putin’s subordinate. So it’s highly unlikely that he would have issued such a statement without first clearing it with Putin. And if Putin gave the go-ahead, it means Moscow may well be prepared to negotiate. Putin, of course, cannot admit as much because it would indicate weakness. If forced to admit weakness, post-war Russia would be left to the mercy of the West, especially the U.S. The paradox in foreign affairs is that the more you need a deal, the less likely you are to get one.

Finally, Biden announced that the United States officially stands by Israel. Though this isn’t a huge surprise, it still seems a massive commitment. But in reality, it’s hard to know what it means. Israeli forces are trained for precisely the battle they are facing in Gaza. So, too, is Hamas. The U.S. has the largest and best-equipped military in the world, but because the armed forces could be deployed to the Arctic as easily as to the jungle, their training tends to be broader. A better way to put it is that U.S. forces are trained to be flexible. Israel is a small country surrounded by potential enemies, so its military is trained in much more specific ways, conditioned to respond to and defeat its attackers on certain terrain and in certain circumstances. To fight in Gaza, U.S. forces would have to be rapidly organized and armed for a fight Israeli forces have been focused on for a long time.

In other words, Israel does not need U.S. ground forces. Integrating them into the battle would delay Israeli action. Israel already has air superiority, as well as an ability, however imperfect, to take out incoming missiles. And U.S. has already committed to Israel billions of dollars for its defense over the years. American participation, then, may simply be a matter of vocal support for a long-time ally rather than an actual commitment to battle.

International affairs has a strange dishonesty in it. Mystery is an inherent vice. China can’t simply define what it needs from the United States, so it pretends that it needs nothing. Washington can’t simply tell China what it is prepared to do because doing so would signal that it knows China’s needs. Putin can’t say what has become common knowledge to everyone, so he had Lukashenko say it.

There are two reasons for these kinds of diplomatic dances. One is pride. Admitting need indicates weakness, and no one wants to be taken advantage of. But second and more important, admitting need reveals intentions, and all nations have a political need to hide their intentions. It’s a cryptic business, yes, but when taken together, all these little signals create a mutual understanding because the complexities of truth and denial make it impossible to understand what is intended. And even when the intention is benign, the safest course is to construct a more threatening intention so as not to be trapped in another’s scheme.

I do not argue that we should change our behavior or reform the practice of foreign affairs. The situation is what it is. I merely point out that humans are strange creatures engaging in strange games. This may seem obvious, but because wars are built on this process, it isn’t trivial.

DougMacG

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Podcast Steve Hayward, Col. Austin Bay of Strategy Page
« Reply #1524 on: November 03, 2023, 06:59:40 AM »
https://www.powerlineblog.com/archives/2023/11/podcast-a-conversation-with-col-austin-bay-about-americas-proxy-wars.php

Covers Ukraine, Russia, Israel, Hamas, Iran, China, Taiwan.

Many interesting points. 55 minutes.

If complete victory over Russia were possible, China would want Siberia. (which is not a win for us)

Ukraine already has won in a sense, but taking back territory lost would be VERY hard.

Israel intelligence failure.  Paragliders were trained in Lebanon. Hard to detect.

What does Iran want?  What is the next phase planned by Hamas, Hezbullah? Turkiye is still cooperating with Israel, despite rhetoric.

China strategy. They prefer slowly surrounding what they want like the game of Go (https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Go_(game)
Geography and defenses of Taiwan. Growing Chinese Navy, ships and artillery.

Would China do it?  You have to be prepared for that and the preparation is the deterrent.

If the US gets bogged down in the Middle East, yes that raises the risk of China making a move.

US weakness is our current leadership class.

The Afghan debacle, American leadership weakness and incompetence definitely encouraged Putin and Iran.

NATO successful.  Biden failure. We are in a very high risk time.

Tribalism vs colonialism in east and central Africa.
« Last Edit: November 03, 2023, 12:00:16 PM by DougMacG »

Crafty_Dog

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Re: US Foreign Policy & Geopolitics
« Reply #1525 on: November 03, 2023, 10:43:32 AM »
Yup.

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Too sanguine for my taste, but it is George Friedman
« Reply #1526 on: November 08, 2023, 09:28:40 AM »

November 8, 2023
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The World Aflame
By: George Friedman
A few weeks ago, I wrote a piece titled “The World Begins to Reorder Itself.” There is certainly a new order coming, but unlike the reordering that took place after the fall of the Soviet Union in 1991, this reordering will emerge from wars and potential wars. The Ukraine war has been raging for nearly two years. There are hints that a peace agreement might be reached, but the conflict continues. The war between Hamas and Israel has been underway for about a month, and it is perhaps the most bitter and unrelenting war seen in a place where unrelenting warfare has become an art.

It goes on. I have heard from two people I trust highly that Serbia is preparing for war. Serbia and Kosovo fought a bloody war in 1998-99 in which the U.S. and NATO sided with Kosovo and conducted a bombing campaign against Serbia. I hope these sources are wrong, but I think this will happen and spread beyond the Balkans.

The Chinese have been intruding on the margins of the Philippines. The Japanese have publicly stated that they will work to strengthen Philippine defenses and help by sending warships in the event China attacks. Japan has also announced that it is increasing cooperation with Malaysia. In addition, China and India have been fighting an off-and-on border war. Japan told India that it was prepared to offer unspecified support.

China has been under substantial economic stress. I do not think it has the naval strength that others believe it does, but it is still a major power. Thus, the Japanese decision to challenge China, even given U.S. support, represents a new role for Japan in the Western Pacific, and one China might be unable to live with. China’s slowing economy is also weakening its government.

Tukey seems to be intruding politically throughout Central Asia, which is an area of extreme importance to Russia. This creates a potentially explosive situation.

The tensions in Southeast Asia, the Balkans and Eastern Europe, the Middle East, and Central Asia are not connected in any significant way. This is not like World War II, where nations were linked to each other, like Germany and Italy or the U.S. and Britain. In that case, the spreading of war was supported by common interests. In the current global system, there seems to be no connection between the various ongoing and potential wars.

That seems to indicate that a wildfire of global war will not occur. But it is hard to understand why there seems to be a proliferation of ongoing and potential conflicts without a common foundation. It may mean that nothing major is really happening, and the idea of disagreements escalating into wars is unfounded. But as always, there are questions that I can’t answer. Why are the Japanese rattling a saber at the same time Palestinians and Israelis are at war and the Balkan states are shuddering? It is not only that there is a set of war realities and possibilities but that they are happening at the same time.

The question may not be answerable, but the U.S. is likely part of the mosaic. Many reasonably feel that the U.S. should get more involved in wars, even if they are not directly of interest to us. But the U.S. is the global hegemon, the world's largest economy and the greatest military power. These factors entangle the U.S. with the majority of the countries in the world, whether through economic linkages or military alliances. The advantage is that the U.S. has choices. But like Britain and Rome before it, the U.S. must be involved selectively. The U.S. crushed Japan in World War II, won a war in the Balkans, helped create Israel and helped mold Ukraine. As we look at this list of wars and possible wars, the U.S. is deeply involved in many ways. Thus, the country I have left out of the list is the United States, which tragically may be drawn into wars with little time to think. That is a topic for historians to consider. Now, we must be concerned with whether my trusted friends have any idea what they are talking about. Most rumored wars never happen.

Crafty_Dog

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Don't count on economic woes to deter China
« Reply #1529 on: November 29, 2023, 02:07:56 PM »
Don’t Count on Economic Woes to Deter China
Xi hasn’t shortchanged the military and boasts of his country’s ability to withstand hardships.
By Michael Gallagher
Nov. 28, 2023 12:54 pm ET

During his September trip to Vietnam, President Biden dismissed a reporter who asked for his thoughts on the threat the Chinese Communist Party poses to Taiwan. “I think China has a difficult economic problem right now,” Mr. Biden said. “I don’t think it’s going to cause China to invade Taiwan. And matter of fact, the opposite—it probably doesn’t have the same capacity that it had before.”

Mr. Biden’s response perhaps explains why his administration’s China policy has veered away from competition and toward accommodation. The hope is that Beijing’s economic woes will make it more conciliatory. But that assumption badly misunderstands the power-hungry nature of the Chinese Communist Party and the lessons of history.

China doubtless has problems. Many commentators have asked if we’ve reached “peak China,” the point at which demographic headwinds and self-destructive economic policies combine to slow the once mighty engine of the Chinese economy, perhaps for good.

But there is good reason to be skeptical that China’s economic difficulties will on their own prevent conflict. Building a first-class military and reclaiming Taiwan are among President Xi Jinping’s priorities. Even if the economy sags and Mr. Xi has to cut back in other areas, the military will get the funds it needs. The Pentagon’s recently released annual report on Chinese military and security developments makes clear that, notwithstanding a significant slowdown in China’s rate of economic growth, Beijing “can support continued growth in defense spending for at least the next five to 10 years.”

Economic pain may actually be a feature of Mr. Xi’s strategy, not a bug. He thinks the U.S. is weak and unwilling to suffer hardship. China endured the Great Leap Forward (1958-62) and the Cultural Revolution (1966-76) and still held together, albeit through intense repression and at the expense of tens of millions of Chinese lives. In the event of a Taiwan conflict, sanctions and supply-chain disruptions would wreak havoc on the global economy. Even if China were harder hit, Mr. Xi might bet that Western societies would buckle first, particularly given his proactive steps to prepare for war. As Mr. Xi put it at the start of the 20th Party Congress in October 2022, China must “prepare for a rainy day, and be ready to withstand major tests of high winds and high waves.”

Additionally, Communist Party leaders may perceive a near-term window of relative advantage before China’s structural problems grow even worse. Scholars Hal Brands and Michael Beckley have warned that the middle to late 2020s could pose a particularly dangerous window for Taiwan for precisely this reason.

At the same time, high unemployment, economic stagnation and popular discontent are existential challenges for the Communist Party. An invasion of Taiwan might provide an effective distraction. If Mr. Xi can’t provide jobs for China’s young people—youth unemployment reached 21% this summer before the Chinese government decided it should stop reporting the figure—or hit previous growth targets, a successful conquest of Taiwan might become more, not less, desirable. If anything, it could become a gambit to jump-start growth, put people to work and unite the country.

Other authoritarian countries have waged war despite domestic economic challenges. Consider Russia under Vladimir Putin. After years of strong growth in the mid-2000s, the Russian economy slowed beginning with the 2008 financial crisis. In the year leading up to the 2014 invasion of Ukraine, Russia grew at less than 2%. Declining oil prices and sanctions have since put a damper on the nation’s economy. Between the 2014 and 2022 invasions of Ukraine, Russia’s growth averaged barely 1%. Nevertheless, Mr. Putin invaded and kept his war machine running, which caused further economic pain in the face of additional sanctions.

Another relevant example is Imperial Japan during the interwar period. Like China today, Japan saw a long boom give way to stagnation, with annual growth falling from an average of 6.2% in 1914-20 to 1.8% in 1921-29, and then to 0.7% in 1930-31 as Japan, like the rest of the world, battled the Great Depression.

The final two years are particularly instructive. The effects of the global crash combined with an abrupt appreciation of the yen, stemming from Japan’s return to the gold standard, led to a paralyzing economic contraction called the Showa Depression. The Showa Depression didn’t, however, temper Japan’s external ambitions. As the nation’s economy was contracting, Tokyo—which had three years earlier signed the Kellogg-Briand Pact outlawing war—invaded Manchuria in September 1931, kicking off the chain of events that would later lead to total war in the Pacific.

The Chinese Communist Party’s recent behavior contradicts Mr. Biden’s hypothesis. As the Chinese economy has slowed, Chinese coast guard and maritime militia vessels have rammed Filipino coast guard and military-resupply ships in the South China Sea. The Philippines is a U.S. ally. The Chinese military has conducted more than 180 unsafe and unprofessional intercepts of U.S. forces over the past two years—a dangerous spike that has brought U.S. and Chinese forces within feet of deadly collisions. China’s threats to Taiwan also escalate daily, including unprecedented incursions by People’s Liberation Army forces over the “median line” in the Taiwan Strait.

War with China isn’t inevitable. But we can’t rely on an economic deus ex machina to prevent a conflict. Rather than wager peace on wishful thinking, American policy makers—from the president to Congress—must move heaven and earth to deter China and prevent a conflict before it is too late.

Mr. Gallagher, a Republican, represents Wisconsin’s Eighth Congressional District and is chairman of the House Select Committee on Strategic Competition between the U.S. and the Chinese Communist Party
« Last Edit: November 30, 2023, 05:56:01 AM by Crafty_Dog »

DougMacG

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Re: US Foreign Policy & Geopolitics
« Reply #1530 on: November 30, 2023, 05:35:11 AM »
Rep. Mike Gallagher R-Wisc no relation to a guy with same name on radio, is one of the good ones on national security.

Economic hardship at home won't stop China from attacking Taiwan.

Conversely, I doubt this regime could ever get overthrown from within when things are going well.  21% youth unemployment and other stagnating economic indicators, it seems to me, might someday lead to internal dissatisfaction and upheaval.

Who knew that technological advancements, internet and AI for example, would empower authoritarian regimes instead of undermine them.

Crafty_Dog

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Kissinger over the years
« Reply #1531 on: December 01, 2023, 12:53:31 PM »
Henry Kissinger’s Strategic Mind
Excerpts of the former secretary of state’s contributions to the Journal editorial pages.
Nov. 30, 2023 6:41 pm ET




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Henry Kissinger in 2015. PHOTO: BAO DANDAN/ZUMA PRESS
Henry Kissinger died Wednesday at 100. These are excerpts from his contributions to the Journal editorial pages over the years

“Vietnam: View of a New Nixon Aide,” Dec. 19, 1968:

However fashionable it is to ridicule the terms “credibility” or “prestige,” they are not empty phrases; other nations can gear their actions to ours only if they can count on our steadiness. . . . In many parts of the world—the Middle East, Europe, Latin America, even Japan—stability depends on confidence in American promises. Unilateral withdrawal, or a settlement which unintentionally amounts to the same thing, could therefore lead to the erosion of restraints and to an even more dangerous international situation. No American policymaker can simply dismiss these dangers. . . .

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No war in a century has aroused the passions of the conflict in Vietnam. By turning Vietnam into a symbol of deeper resentments, many groups have defeated the objective they profess to seek. However we got into Vietnam, whatever the judgment of our actions, ending the war honorably is essential for the peace of the world. Any other solution may unloose forces that would complicate prospects of international order. A new Administration must be given the benefit of the doubt and a chance to move toward a peace which grants the people of Vietnam what they have so long struggled to achieve: An opportunity to work out their own destiny in their own way.

“Old Wine in New Bottles,” with Brent Scowcroft, Nov. 12, 1984:

Old myths never die; unlike old soldiers, they do not even seem to fade away. So it is with the fairy tale assiduously fostered in the ’70s after the Vietnam War was safely out of the way and Watergate made it impossible to implement the new mock-tough rhetoric: that a group of wooly-headed and naive individuals headed by Richard M. Nixon were hornswoggled by the wily Soviets in the SALT agreements and that those agreements in turn were the proximate cause of our later international troubles in the ’70s.

In the heady days immediately following Watergate, no charge involving President Nixon seemed too preposterous, including the one that this man, once reviled as an unreconstructed cold warrior, was a gullible victim of sentimental rhetoric.

At first, that theory was put forward by conservatives who, once in office, found it necessary to run for reelection on a commitment to arms control no different from Richard Nixon’s—if stated somewhat more sentimentally.

But recently a new group of spinners of the mock-tough epic poetry has emerged: Some liberals of the ’60s seem to want to gain the good will of the now-dominant conservatives by a version as self-serving as it is cynical. . . .

We think it essential that our country not be split between those who seek agreement for its own sake and others who chase the illusion that abandoning arms control solves our strategic or diplomatic problem. The opposite is true. We cannot hold together our alliances or our people if we abandon commitment to arms control. What we can and must do is to give that commitment a content compatible with our national security, the evolving technology and our values.

“A World Free of Nuclear Weapons,” with George P. Shultz, William J. Perry and Sam Nunn, Jan. 4, 2007:

Nuclear weapons today present tremendous dangers, but also an historic opportunity. . . . Reassertion of the vision of a world free of nuclear weapons and practical measures toward achieving that goal would be, and would be perceived as, a bold initiative consistent with America’s moral heritage. The effort could have a profoundly positive impact on the security of future generations. Without the bold vision, the actions will not be perceived as fair or urgent. Without the actions, the vision will not be perceived as realistic or possible.

We endorse setting the goal of a world free of nuclear weapons and working energetically on the actions required to achieve that goal.

“A Path Out of the Middle East Collapse,” Oct. 17, 2015:

The prevailing U.S. policy toward Iran is often compared by its advocates to the Nixon administration’s opening to China, which contributed, despite some domestic opposition, to the ultimate transformation of the Soviet Union and the end of the Cold War. The comparison is not apt. The opening to China in 1971 was based on the mutual recognition by both parties that the prevention of Russian hegemony in Eurasia was in their common interest. And 42 Soviet divisions lining the Sino-Soviet border reinforced that conviction.

No comparable strategic agreement exists between Washington and Tehran. On the contrary, in the immediate aftermath of the nuclear accord, Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei described the U.S. as the “Great Satan” and rejected negotiations with America about nonnuclear matters. Completing his geopolitical diagnosis, Mr. Khamenei also predicted that Israel would no longer exist in 25 years.

Forty-five years ago, the expectations of China and the U.S. were symmetrical. The expectations underlying the nuclear agreement with Iran are not. Tehran will gain its principal objectives at the beginning of the implementation of the accord. America’s benefits reside in a promise of Iranian conduct over a period of time. The opening to China was based on an immediate and observable adjustment in Chinese policy, not on an expectation of a fundamental change in China’s domestic system. The optimistic hypothesis on Iran postulates that Tehran’s revolutionary fervor will dissipate as its economic and cultural interactions with the outside world increase.

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“The Coronavirus Pandemic Will Forever Alter the World Order,” April 4, 2020:

The surreal atmosphere of the Covid-19 pandemic calls to mind how I felt as a young man in the 84th Infantry Division during the Battle of the Bulge. Now, as in late 1944, there is a sense of inchoate danger, aimed not at any particular person, but striking randomly and with devastation. But there is an important difference between that faraway time and ours. American endurance then was fortified by an ultimate national purpose. Now, in a divided country, efficient and farsighted government is necessary to overcome obstacles unprecedented in magnitude and global scope. Sustaining the public trust is crucial to social solidarity, to the relation of societies with each other, and to international peace and stability.

Nations cohere and flourish on the belief that their institutions can foresee calamity, arrest its impact and restore stability. When the Covid-19 pandemic is over, many countries’ institutions will be perceived as having failed. Whether this judgment is objectively fair is irrelevant. The reality is the world will never be the same after the coronavirus. To argue now about the past only makes it harder to do what has to be done.

The coronavirus has struck with unprecedented scale and ferocity. Its spread is exponential: U.S. cases are doubling every fifth day. At this writing, there is no cure. Medical supplies are insufficient to cope with the widening waves of cases. Intensive-care units are on the verge, and beyond, of being overwhelmed. Testing is inadequate to the task of identifying the extent of infection, much less reversing its spread. A successful vaccine could be 12 to 18 months away. . . .

The world’s democracies need to defend and sustain their Enlightenment values. A global retreat from balancing power with legitimacy will cause the social contract to disintegrate both domestically and internationally. Yet this millennial issue of legitimacy and power cannot be settled simultaneously with the effort to overcome the Covid-19 plague. Restraint is necessary on all sides—in both domestic politics and international diplomacy. Priorities must be established.

“ChatGPT Heralds an Intellectual Revolution,” with Eric Schmidt and Daniel Huttenlocher, Feb. 25, 2023:

As the technology becomes more widely understood, it will have a profound impact on international relations. Unless the technology for knowledge is universally shared, imperialism could focus on acquiring and monopolizing data to attain the latest advances in AI. Models may produce different outcomes depending on the data assembled. Differential evolutions of societies may evolve on the basis of increasingly divergent knowledge bases and hence of the perception of challenges. . . .

Leadership is likely to concentrate in hands of the fewer people and institutions who control access to the limited number of machines capable of high-quality synthesis of reality. Because of the enormous cost of their processing power, the most effective machines within society may stay in the hands of a small subgroup domestically and in the control of a few superpowers internationally. After the transitional stage, older models will grow cheaper, and a diffusion of power through society and among states may commence.

A reinvigorated moral and strategic leadership will be essential. Without guiding principles, humanity runs the risk of domination or anarchy, unconstrained authority or nihilistic freedom. The need for relating major societal change to ethical justifications and novel visions for the future will appear in a new form. If the maxims put forth by ChatGPT are not translated into a cognizably human endeavor, alienation of society and even revolution may become likely.

Without proper moral and intellectual underpinnings, machines used in governance could control rather than amplify our humanity and trap us forever. In such a world, artificial intelligence might amplify human freedom and transcend unconstrained challenges.


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Should Turkey be kicked out of NATO?
« Reply #1533 on: December 02, 2023, 07:46:39 AM »
should Turkey be kicked out of Nato?

Turkey has been a member of NATO since 1952 1. However, there have been debates on whether Turkey should remain in NATO. Some experts argue that Turkey’s recent actions, such as its purchase of the Russian S-400 air defense system, its military intervention in Syria, and its human rights record, have made it an unreliable ally 12. Others argue that Turkey is a strategically important member of NATO, given its location and its role in the fight against ISIS 23.

According to a commentary by Doug Bandow in The American Conservative, NATO needs to have a serious conversation about what to do when a member can no longer be trusted 1. The author argues that Turkey’s democratic infirmities and its later military coups were overlooked when it joined the alliance 1. However, after the Soviet collapse, NATO rushed past the European Union to welcome the detritus of the Soviet empire, proclaiming the alliance’s determination to promote democratic reform 1. Even as NATO’s lead member wandered the globe bombing, invading, and occupying nations at will—resulting in hundreds of thousands of deaths along the way— alliance members proclaimed their democratic credentials 1.

Despite the controversies surrounding Turkey’s membership, some experts believe that Turkey is still a valuable member of NATO 23. According to a report by the USC Global Policy Institute, Turkey’s historical and strategic significance as a member of the alliance has not changed 2. The report argues that NATO needs Turkey as a partner rather than as an adversary, and expelling the country would undoubtedly result in increasingly hostile relations between Ankara and NATO members in the Mediterranean and Balkans 2.

In conclusion, the question of whether Turkey should remain in NATO is a complex one, with arguments on both sides. Ultimately, it is up to NATO to decide whether Turkey’s actions are consistent with the alliance’s values and goals.


« Last Edit: December 02, 2023, 11:30:13 AM by Crafty_Dog »

Crafty_Dog

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Re: US Foreign Policy & Geopolitics
« Reply #1534 on: December 02, 2023, 11:32:31 AM »
From my libertarian days I remember Doug Bandow as a mega-isolationist.

"Even as NATO’s lead member wandered the globe bombing, invading, and occupying nations at will—resulting in hundreds of thousands of deaths along the way"

This author can fukk off IMHO.

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WRM on Kissinger
« Reply #1535 on: December 05, 2023, 12:52:59 AM »
Henry Kissinger on Power and Morality
His objective was to build, tend and repair a sustainable balance in global affairs.
Walter Russell Mead
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Walter Russell Mead
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Dec. 4, 2023 6:19 pm ET




“Now what can the old fox mean by that?” Klemens von Metternich is supposed to have said when the great French diplomat Charles Maurice de Talleyrand-Périgord died in 1838. Like Talleyrand, my friend and teacher Henry Kissinger spent half a century in the world of high politics, survived the political eclipse of his original employer, grew rich over the course of a controversial career, and demonstrated intellectual and political agility that led some to hail him as a genius and others to curse him as a monster.

OPINION: POTOMAC WATCH
WSJ Opinion Potomac Watch
The Legacy of Henry Kissinger


Nothing about the public reaction to Kissinger’s death would have surprised him. He had been the object of intense adulation and passionate loathing for more than 50 years. Although he enjoyed the admiration much more than the hate, he was used to both. More than that, he appreciated both sentiments at something like their real worth.

One element of Kissinger’s diplomatic talent was an almost preternatural intuition that let him grasp the worldview of his interlocutors, often understanding them better than they understood themselves. He felt the full intellectual and moral weight of the attacks against him but found the burden less than crushing. This wasn’t because he held morality in contempt. It was because he thought most criticism of his decisions in office reflected a shallow understanding of politics. That understanding, he believed, was often filtered through a partisan reading of history that overlooked the sins of Democratic presidents as it picked obsessively at the faults of Republicans.

Kissinger understood something that too many Americans, on the left and right, find difficult to grasp: Power and morality aren’t opposites. Rather, power is the platform that makes moral action possible for a state. And morality isn’t a set of rules and laws that states are expected to obey. Rather, in international relations, morality involves creating an order that prevents the anarchy and slaughter of great-power warfare. Such an order gains legitimacy not by its perfect adherence to a religious or secular moral code, but by its ability to preserve values and conditions that allow civilizations, and the human beings who inhabit them, to flourish.

The disastrous follies of the Kennedy and Johnson administrations had left the U.S. in a difficult predicament when Richard Nixon brought Kissinger into the White House in 1969. The overreaching hubris of technocratic intellectuals like McGeorge Bundy and Robert McNamara, along with the naive liberal determinism of Walt Rostow and others, had led the U.S. into an unwinnable and unsustainable war. Worse, as the Soviets reached strategic nuclear parity with the U.S. and the Bretton Woods economic order buckled when the gold standard lost credibility, the entire post-World War II order was in danger of collapse. There was, Nixon and Kissinger believed, no elegant escape from this predicament. Devils had to be supped with, promises had to be broken, and sometimes blood would be left on the floor.

For Kissinger, the construction, tending and repair of a sustainable balance in global affairs was the supreme moral and political challenge of statecraft, especially as nuclear weapons threatened to make great power war unsurvivable. If the restoration of balance required embracing Mao Zedong at the height of his sanguinary career, so be it. If it required more bombs in North Vietnam and Cambodia, then send in the B-52s. Any guilt or shame attached to such moves belonged in his view to those whose follies had left the U.S. with nothing but bad choices.

Politically, Kissinger was a victim of his success. Once America’s position in the world had been restored, Americans turned in revulsion from the methods and the men responsible for turning the tide. Liberals such as Jimmy Carter wanted American foreign policy to focus on human rights. Conservatives such as Ronald Reagan wanted to replace Kissingerian détente with a more robustly anti-Soviet approach. Neither camp fully understood that the ability to pursue far-reaching ideological goals was a consequence of Kissinger’s achievement.

Statesmen err, sometimes with tragic consequences, as rapid-fire decisions are made in an era of crisis. Kissinger always accepted that. He could be sensitive, but I never saw him get truly angry with someone who argued that a decision he made in office was in error.

Although he was angrier when people impugned his morals than when they attacked his decisions, what frustrated Kissinger most was not that some academics and writers held him in moral disdain. It was that he never succeeded in getting a critical mass of Americans to embrace the approach to statecraft that, in his view, offered the greatest chance to secure American interests while preserving our increasingly fragile civilization from the ravages of war.

Crafty_Dog

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Don't pay attention to that man behind the screen
« Reply #1536 on: December 05, 2023, 02:42:43 AM »
In China, Henry Kissinger Was the Ultimate Door-Opener
The engineer of U.S.-China opening wielded his influence and unparalleled access over five decades
By James T. Areddy and Charles Hutzler
WSJ
Updated Nov. 30, 2023 6:26 pm ET

Henry Kissinger influenced how the U.S. and China interacted until the final weeks of his life.

His death Wednesday at age 100 sparked recollections in both nations about how the former secretary of state’s secret trips to Beijing more than a half-century ago paved the way for the momentous 1972 visit by then-President Richard Nixon that allowed the U.S. and China to form a relationship.

The remembrances have been especially warm in China, where Kissinger occupied a singular role: He was the one American granted consistent access to Beijing’s most senior leaders back to Mao Zedong.

Over the years, Kissinger applied his skills navigating the corridors of power into roles that made him wealthy and kept him influential. China was quick to say Wednesday that Kissinger took more than 100 trips to China, and while many were low-key, successive Chinese heads of state used his visits to signal to Washington their interest in dialogue.

Chinese leader Xi Jinping—who greeted Kissinger in Beijing in July despite otherwise strained bilateral ties—dispatched condolences to President Biden. “Dr. Kissinger was an old friend and a good friend of the Chinese people, as well as a pioneer and architect of China-U. S. relations,” a spokesman for China’s Foreign Ministry told a news briefing in Beijing.


Secretary of State Henry Kissinger and Chinese Premier Zhou Enlai in 1973. Over the years, Kissinger made more than 100 trips to China, according to Beijing. PHOTO: BETTMANN ARCHIVE/GETTY IMAGES
U.S. presidents after Nixon took counsel from Kissinger, too. But as U.S. views toward China hardened, successive administrations cooled to the engagement he advocated. Biden said he was a young senator when he first met Kissinger and he noted that Kissinger offered views on policy discussions long after he retired.

“Throughout our careers, we often disagreed. And often strongly,” the president said. “But from that first briefing—his fierce intellect and profound strategic focus was evident.” Secretary of State Antony Blinken credited Kissinger for “countless history-bending decisions” and his “lasting imprint,” including on Blinken’s own China interactions.


The U.S. opening to China engineered by Kissinger was a globe-changing event. The two governments had been estranged for more than two decades, fought against each other in the Korean War and stood on opposing sides of the Vietnam War, in which Beijing funneled resources and manpower to the North Vietnamese side.

Rapprochement with China helped the U.S. extricate itself from Vietnam. It allowed Beijing and Washington to make common cause against the Soviet Union, which vied with Mao’s government for influence in the Communist bloc and among developing nations.

That undeclared alliance paved the way later in the 1970s for diplomatic relations and a severing of formal U.S. ties with Taiwan and made it easier for American businesses to pour into China after Mao’s successors gingerly introduced market-based policies.


The U.S. opening to China engineered five decades ago by Henry Kissinger, shown in Beijing in 2018, was a world-changing event. PHOTO: THOMAS PETER/REUTERS
Kissinger’s influence remained strong in Beijing after his government service ended in the 1970s, not least because he was viewed as a consistent advocate for engagement between the governments.

“Relations between China and the United States need not—and should not—become a zero-sum game,” Kissinger wrote in “On China”—a 500-page attempt to explain China to American readers that was published in 2011, when Beijing’s exercise of its growing power was testing ties. He maintained that view even as relations later plummeted.

Kissinger’s strategic, realpolitik mindset and preference for back-channel negotiations aligned with the Chinese Communist Party’s pragmatic approach to challenges and its disdain for public debate. His methods also suited American boardrooms, where Kissinger was regarded as the ultimate door-opener in China.


Tracking Kissinger’s efforts to resolve a series of challenges for foreign businesses in China, Isaac Stone Fish’s 2022 book, “America Second: How America’s Elites Are Making China Stronger,” questions whether economic interests affected his counsel on broader U.S.-China relations.

Stone Fish uses archival material to show how in May 1989 Kissinger formed a $75 million China Ventures fund with a Chinese government-owned business—then argued against retaliatory American government sanctions on Beijing after the People’s Liberation Army opened fire on pro-democracy demonstrators the following month.


Being seen with Henry Kissinger burnished the image of Chinese leaders like Jiang Zemin, shown with the former secretary of state in 1995, because of his direct connection to icons like Mao Zedong and Zhou Enlai. PHOTO: JIM BOURG/REUTERS

Because of the kind of advice he dispensed, Kissinger “allowed the Communist Party to have greater control over foreign companies, and for companies to be closer to the party and for Kissinger to accumulate wealth and influence,” Stone Fish said.

His privately run New York advisory, Kissinger Associates, doesn’t report financial figures nor discuss its client roster, but industry watchers say the firm has worked in China on behalf of numerous blue-chip American corporations, often to sort out their problems. “He was careful. He had access to Chinese leaders because they were interested in his views on foreign policy,” said J. Stapleton Roy, a former U.S. ambassador to China and executive at Kissinger Associates. Kissinger often took corporate executives with him to meet the leaders, but he let them handle discussions of their business problems in China rather than ask for favors, and in that way protected his access, Roy said.

While loquacious on China’s place in global affairs over the years, Kissinger tended to sidestep discussion of its human-rights record. When he was pressed on the subject during an interview with The Wall Street Journal’s editorial page in 2011, Kissinger said his policy “is to talk to [Chinese leaders], but my personal view isn’t to denounce it publicly.”

After U.S.-China ties plumbed a new low this year over Taiwan, U.S. technology controls, Ukraine and a suspected Chinese surveillance balloon, the Biden administration tried to arrest the downward spiral by sending a string of high-level officials to Beijing.

Amid that outreach, Kissinger showed up in the Chinese capital in July, not long after turning 100, sitting with Chinese leader Xi in the same ornate government guesthouse where the American diplomat negotiated with Premier Zhou Enlai a half-century earlier to prepare for Nixon’s trip.

That meeting with Zhou, Kissinger told Xi, showed “the relations between our two countries would be central to the peace in the world and to the progress of our societies.”


Henry Kissinger had traveled to China as recently as July, shortly after turning 100, and met with Chinese leader Xi Jinping at the official government guesthouse. PHOTO: HUANG JINGWEN/ZUMA PRESS
Xi praised the “splendid strategic vision” of that past groundbreaking diplomatic effort. To Kissinger, Xi said: “We’ll never forget our old friend.”

Beijing had been playing hard to get with the Biden administration. So the tone of the Kissinger encounter was noted in Washington. When Xi later agreed to come to the U.S. for a summit with Biden, Chinese diplomats wanted Kissinger to introduce the Chinese leader at a planned banquet in San Francisco with American CEOs. After they learned that Kissinger was too frail to travel, they asked if he could make an introduction by video. That didn’t happen.

Still, in addressing the business crowd, Xi cited his meeting with Kissinger as part of the push to restore relations.

In Beijing, because of Kissinger’s direct connection to icons like Mao and Zhou, being seen with him helped burnish Chinese leaders’ image.

While Kissinger found open doors in Beijing, his influence with recent U.S. presidential administrations waned. Officials listened to him but didn’t necessarily buy into his view of the necessity of U.S.-China cooperation.

In October, a frail but lucid Kissinger noted that he had spent literally half his life on Chinese-American relations, and warned a New York audience that “the two countries have a unique ability to bring peace and progress to the world, and they also have a unique ability to destroy the world if they’re not together.”

—Chun Han Wong contributed to this article.

Write to James T. Areddy at James.Areddy@wsj.com and Charles Hutzler at charles.hutzler@wsj.com

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Victory not an option for Biden
« Reply #1537 on: December 11, 2023, 03:16:41 PM »
Victory Seems Not to Be an Option for Biden
The Afghan pullout set a precedent for weakness in Ukraine and the Middle East.
By Garry Kasparov (MARC:  Russian, former world chess champ)
Dec. 10, 2023 5:20 pm ET



With less than a year until the election, President Biden’s legacy is beginning to take shape. He is leaving a record of defeat.

From Afghanistan to Ukraine to Gaza, Mr. Biden has adopted Barack Obama’s playbook of leading the free world from behind. On Dec. 1, Secretary of State Antony Blinken made his fourth visit to Israel since the Hamas terrorist attacks of Oct. 7. His remarks focused on what Israel shouldn’t do in Gaza rather than on how to defeat the Hamas terrorists who are still holding around 140 hostages.

Mr. Biden’s Obama-era team—national security adviser Jake Sullivan, Central Intelligence Agency Director William J. Burns and climate envoy John Kerry—adore grand bargains that make them feel like masters of the geopolitical universe. What the U.S. gives up in these deals is usually clear. But it’s rarely apparent what America and her allies get in return. Washington sent billions in cash to Iran for unverifiable promises and restrained Ukraine to try to win favor with Russia.

It’s convenient for Mr. Biden that MAGA Republicans oppose aid to Ukraine; he can blame them for his failure to deliver. While it’s true that Congress is playing politics with American credibility and Ukrainian lives, so is Mr. Biden, who has the power to arm Ukraine today if he wished. The tanks, ATACMS, big drones and jets that Ukraine needs to win the war are collecting dust in American warehouses instead of destroying the Russian military.

On Nov. 18, I represented the Russian Action Committee at the 15th Halifax Security Forum. Remarks there by Estonian Defense Minister Hanno Pevkur and others strengthened my belief that the U.S. is deliberately allowing the Russian occupation to continue. Two vital arteries feed Vladimir Putin’s army and enable his occupation: the Crimean land bridge and the Melitopol railway. According to several analysts, a single barrage of properly loaded ATACMS could destroy both and starve Mr. Putin’s invading army of supplies. Withholding these armaments is a choice.

At every point of conflict in his presidency, Mr. Biden’s modus operandi, like Mr. Obama’s, has been to make concessions to create the illusion of diplomatic success. Mr. Biden appears intent on cutting yet another deal to make the problem of Ukraine go away—for the moment. The same shortsighted fecklessness led Mr. Obama to back off from defending Ukraine in 2014 when Mr. Putin first invaded and annexed Crimea, leading inevitably to his full-scale invasion in 2022. My great fear is that Mr. Biden’s envoys are now discussing with Mr. Putin the partition of Ukraine along the current front lines.

Mr. Biden has refused to support Ukraine’s immediate admission to the North Atlantic Treaty Organization. I predict he will offer NATO membership for the unoccupied parts of Ukraine as a carrot to coerce President Volodymyr Zelensky into accepting this unholy partition. A considerable part of Russia’s frozen assets in the West—held as a bargaining chip by Mr. Biden—could be given to Ukraine as a sweetener.

I also worry that when Mr. Biden met with China’s Xi Jinping on Nov. 15, he might have offered concessions to China in return for Mr. Xi’s support in pressuring Mr. Putin to accept such a proposition. It would condemn millions of Ukrainians to persecution and ethnic cleansing—and any cease-fire would last only until Mr. Putin is ready to take another bite of Europe.

Allowing Mr. Xi to act as a global power broker would follow Mr. Biden’s dismal pattern. He abandoned Afghanistan out of fear of staying longer, and the incompetent American retreat emboldened Mr. Putin to invade Ukraine. By letting Mr. Putin get away with invasion and atrocities in Ukraine, Mr. Biden’s advisers emboldened Iran-backed Hamas to invade Israel. When the Biden administration eased oil sanctions on Venezuela, dictator Nicolás Maduro responded by cracking down on elections and preparing to annex half of neighboring Guyana.

If Mr. Biden allows Mr. Putin to take more Ukrainian territory by force today, he would embolden Mr. Xi to invade Taiwan tomorrow. Weakness invites aggression. War and terror spread until the leaders are neutralized.

If Mr. Biden armed Ukraine for victory, Mr. Putin wouldn’t survive long. His downfall would cripple a circle of thugs and terrorists from Caracas to Tehran. It’s also possible that Russia as it exists today wouldn’t survive. So what? Recall that many foreign-policy experts, including President George H.W. Bush, attempted to preserve the Soviet Union out of fear of what might happen if it fell. I’m grateful they failed.

The collapse of the Soviet Union led to an unparalleled expansion of global freedom, an opportunity that Ukraine and others seized. Mr. Putin and his KGB gang ripped that from our grasp. The end of the Russian mafia state would be a mortal blow to the forces of terrorism and tyranny. Israel and Ukraine are fighting the same fight. The Biden administration should be doing everything possible to help them win instead of holding them back.

Mr. Kasparov is chairman of the Renew Democracy Initiative and a co-founder of the Russian Action Committee.


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Chang: WW3
« Reply #1538 on: December 17, 2023, 06:44:06 PM »

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WSJ: NATO, Trump, and Congress
« Reply #1539 on: December 18, 2023, 04:59:35 PM »
NATO and Donald Trump
Congress tries to take out an insurance policy against a President’s unilateral U.S. withdrawal.
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Dec. 18, 2023 6:37 pm ET




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U.S. alliances are more important than ever in an increasingly dangerous world, so it’s notable that Congress is taking out an insurance policy against a President who might decide to withdraw from the North Atlantic Treaty Organization on his own authority. Now, who might that President be?

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In the annual defense policy bill that passed last week, Congress included a provision requiring a U.S. President to consult Congress before withdrawing from NATO. The bipartisan measure, sponsored by Sens. Tim Kaine (D., Va.) and Marco Rubio (R., Fla.), would require assent from two-thirds of the Senate or an act of Congress. The enforcement mechanism is withholding funds for such a withdrawal.

Congress’s concern here is clearly Mr. Trump. He has long disliked U.S. forward military deployments in places like South Korea, and he has railed against NATO in particular. “By some accounts,” he tweeted in 2018, “the U.S. is paying for 90% of NATO, with many countries nowhere close” to spending 2% of their economy on defense. The tweet ended with a signature “NO!”

Mr. Trump is right that the Europeans have allowed their defenses to atrophy to the point of embarrassment, though the picture is improving. Some 11 of 31 members meet the alliance goal of spending 2% of GDP on defense, up from three in 2014, according to data the alliance released over the summer.

In any case, American defense spending isn’t charity. A stable Europe is a core U.S. strategic interest, a lesson Americans learned twice in the 20th century at tremendous cost. The risks of abandoning NATO have compounded since Mr. Trump left office, with Russia’s Vladimir Putin launching a land war on the European continent.

But a bent toward isolationism is one of Mr. Trump’s core impulses. Former national security adviser John Bolton recounts in his memoirs that Mr. Trump unloaded on NATO secretary general Jens Stoltenberg that “NATO was egregious, complaining that Spain (he had just met the King) spent only 0.9% of its GDP on defense.” Mr. Bolton and others talked Mr. Trump out of trying to pull back from the alliance, only for him to ask again “why we didn’t just withdraw from NATO entirely.”

Mr. Trump’s rhetoric often exceeds his grasp, and he failed to follow through on many of his unilateral threats. But who knows what Mr. Trump might attempt as part of his promise to settle the war in Ukraine in “24 hours.”

The problem with Congress’s NATO provision is that it probably couldn’t stop a determined President. The Constitution grants broad powers to the Commander in Chief on foreign policy, and the precedents include George W. Bush’s withdrawal from the ABM Treaty and Jimmy Carter’s renegotiation of control over the Panama Canal. Congress could employ the power of the purse in an attempt to stop implementation of a withdrawal, but that couldn’t stop the actual decision.

The NATO provision is nonetheless useful in showing Europe that U.S. support for the alliances is strong and bipartisan. And for showing any isolationist President, whether a populist of the right or left, that the political price for withdrawal would be high.

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WRM: Biden's doom loop
« Reply #1541 on: December 20, 2023, 08:57:02 AM »
sceond

Biden’s Foreign-Policy Doom Loop
As U.S. power is seen to recede, risks rise in the South China Sea and elsewhere.
Walter Russell Mead
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Dec. 18, 2023 5:50 pm ET


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With less than a year before a challenging election, the Biden administration risks getting caught in a political doom loop. President Biden’s perceived weakness at home undermines his authority in dealing with foreign leaders, while the deteriorating global picture erodes his popularity at home.


Mr. Biden’s foreign-policy efforts have not exactly been crowned with success. In Ukraine, Western squabbles and policy misfires have given Vladimir Putin reason to hope that victory might be heading his way. In the Middle East, as the original wave of Western sympathy for Israel following the Hamas terror attack fades, calls for a cease-fire that would leave Hamas in control of Gaza steadily mount. More ominously still, Iran’s proxies in Lebanon, Syria, Yemen and Iraq are stepping up their assaults, with the Houthis now attacking peaceful commerce in the vital Red Sea.

This is not a world that is becoming more stable, and it is not a world in which American interests or values are becoming more secure. It is not a world in which America’s rivals and enemies are gaining respect for the president. It is not a world in which America’s waning powers of deterrence can long hold back the rising tide of aggression and war.

The Indo-Pacific has been quieter lately, but only because China remains committed to its creeping gradualism, or “cabbage leaf strategy.” Building new islands, equipping them as military bases, harassing American ships and planes, challenging Taiwanese airspace, staging invasion exercises: The cabbage slowly grows, one leaf at a time.

These days, China is looking toward rich fishing grounds and the adjacent shoals and atolls that, under widely recognized legal principles, form part of the Philippines’s Exclusive Economic Zone. The EEZ’s Scarborough and Second Thomas shoals have long attracted fishing fleets. Increasingly, they are attracting aggressive Chinese maritime militia and coast-guard forces as well.

The Philippines controlled the Scarborough Shoal before 2012, but China pushed Manila aside, advancing Beijing’s legally baseless claims to most of the South China Sea. Philippine fishing boats still attempt to fish in these troubled waters, but Chinese maritime militia and coast-guard vessels harass and obstruct them, deploying inflatable boats, buoys and a “long-range acoustic device” that temporarily incapacitate Philippine crew members. This month Chinese ships fired water cannons and rammed Philippine vessels trying to bring fuel and food to Philippine crews in the area.

Looking for diplomatic solutions, Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. met with Chinese leader Xi Jinping at the Asia-Pacific economic summit in San Francisco last month. While Biden administration officials hailed improved U.S.-China relations following the summit, Beijing’s response to the Philippines was chilly. Jose Manuel Romualdez, the Philippine ambassador to the U.S., said Mr. Xi’s answers to Mr. Marcos’s requests were “disappointing,” “evasive” and “noncommittal.” Mr. Xi “didn’t say anything,” Mr. Romualdez told the Japanese newspaper Nikkei Asia.

Chinese provocations have only increased since the summit. Chinese forces are moving against the Philippine presence in the Second Thomas Shoal. “It’s pure aggression,” Phillipine Gen. Romeo Brawner Jr. told the Associated Press. A wooden-hulled ship he was aboard, posing no threat to Chinese vessels, was blasted by water cannons and bumped by Chinese forces as it brought supplies to a small military force stationed on a long-marooned Philippine navy ship at the shoal.

China turned up the heat another notch on Dec. 11, when 11 Chinese vessels entered the Second Thomas Shoal, with up to 27 vessels present all week. “Next after the water cannon is probably ramming and also they will attempt to board our vessel,” Philippine Vice Adm. Alberto Carlos told CNN Philippines.

Amid escalating Chinese pressure, Philippine officials are trying to rouse Washington and its allies to respond. Calling the South China Sea a flashpoint comparable to the Taiwan Strait, Ambassador Romualdez told Nikkei that conflict near the Philippines could be “the beginning of another war, world war.”

When I visited U.S. naval commanders in Pearl Harbor this fall, I heard similar concerns. As American power globally is perceived to recede, chances of escalation in the South China Sea rise.

It is the same sad story all over the world. The doom loop is real. Unless Mr. Biden restores his credibility and that of the nation he leads, we must expect more conflict, and more cabbage leaves, before an election on which, as Team Biden incessantly repeats, the fate of American democracy depends.

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US needs a ME strategy
« Reply #1544 on: December 28, 2023, 04:41:52 AM »
America Needs a Middle East Strategy
The U.S. can bring the Gulf Arabs closer while doing much more to contain the Iran menace.
By Seth Cropsey
Dec. 26, 2023 6:07 pm ET



Nearly two months into Israel’s ground campaign, all eyes are on the Gaza Strip. Yet divisions over Gaza point to a disconnect between U.S. policy and strategic reality. The Middle East is headed toward a major war, for which the U.S. needs a strategy well beyond Gaza.

Since late November, the Biden administration’s approach to the Gaza war has been to issue generic statements of discontent for domestic audiences absent policy action. Washington and Jerusalem disagree on their visions of postwar Gaza. The administration sees the Palestinian Authority as the most viable partner for governance there. Israel can’t accept this, given the authority’s corruption, incompetence and unpopularity in Gaza and the West Bank. A Palestinian Authority-governed Gaza would relapse into Hamas-style radicalism, if not direct Hamas rule.

Oct. 7 was the first step in a new phase of Iran’s campaign against Israel and America. Iran is a revolutionary regime akin to Napoleonic France or the Soviet Union. Tehran’s goal since 1979 has been to export the Islamic revolution throughout the Middle East. Israel’s military power and the U.S.-Israel relationship are the main impediments, as they are the only two actors that can seriously damage Iran.

Tehran’s strategy, shaped by now-dead Quds Force Commander Qassem Soleimani, is a broad campaign of state capture. In Lebanon, Syria, Iraq and Yemen, Iran has sponsored proxies with the goal of co-opting the security services and building an alliance called the Axis of Resistance. Axis members have diverse goals but are united in their hatred of Israel and the U.S.

The axis can’t defeat Israel conventionally. It has to grind Israel down in a war of attrition, imposing overwhelming political, economic and societal costs. Winning requires disrupting the U.S.-Israel alliance, since as long as Washington backs Jerusalem’s survival, Israel will be too strong to undermine.

Iran’s actions since Oct. 7 have accelerated its attrition war. Israel’s mobilization and deployment of armored assets to the north deterred immediate Iranian intervention. Yet Iran has deployed and now maintains some 100,000 Iraqi fighters in Syria. It has mobilized Hezbollah and placed the Syrian Arab Army’s most cooperative elements on a war footing. Whatever happens in Gaza, this threat remains.

Hamas’s role in the plan is clear. Its control of Gaza was a useful pressure point against Israel, raising the potential for encirclement. But the real prize is the West Bank, home to three million Palestinians and bordering Jordan’s two million Palestinians. The desiccated Palestinian Authority has lost control of many urban areas in the West Bank. During November’s hostage-prisoner swap, Hamas organized parades throughout the West Bank, including in the authority’s Ramallah stronghold.

Iran’s expanding presence in Syria poses a continuous threat to the West Bank, given back-channels that can move weapons and ammunition from Damascus through Jordan. A Hezbollah rocket bombardment and ground incursion are possible.

The Iranian presence in Syria and Lebanon also menaces Jordan. Any threat to Jordan is a threat to Israel, since a hostile Amman would mean Israel is encircled. Hence the threat in the West Bank and the threat to Israel’s north have merged.

Iran’s stronghold in Syria is this strategy’s linchpin. Without Damascus as a supply hub, Iran would struggle to maintain forces in Lebanon and pressure on the West Bank. Israel has manifest cause to conduct a lightning strike to the north, employing an air-power-heavy campaign and ground war to achieve a swift victory. Iran understands that only the U.S. can restrain Israel, forcing it to fight the slower war of attrition that favors Iran.

Already, Tehran has sowed divisions between Washington and Jerusalem. The Biden administration refused to name Iran as directly responsible for any events leading up to or following Oct. 7 or the 100-plus attacks on U.S. Mideast bases since that day. Over the weekend, the U.S. finally accused Iran of an attack. The Chem Pluto, “a Liberia-flagged, Japanese-owned, and Netherlands-operated chemical tanker” bound for India, was hit 200 nautical miles from the Indian coast, according to the Pentagon. Given the location, a drone launched from Iranian territory likely conducted the attack. Washington’s fixation on Gaza is deliberate myopia. The U.S. still views the current situation as a crisis to be managed, not a strategic competition to be won.

Prudent policy could prevail if the U.S. frames the competition properly. The struggle for the Mideast, which is likely to escalate, is part of the broader struggle for Eurasian control that pits the U.S. and its allies against revisionist China, Russia and Iran. Just as the U.S. has a strategic stake in Ukrainian victory, it has an equal stake in deterring Chinese intervention in Taiwan and defeating Iran’s bid for dominance. Geopolitics requires a horizon beyond crisis management. The sooner Washington adopts this perspective, the better the odds of coherent strategy.

The U.S. can isolate Iran’s proxies in Syria and Lebanon. It could conduct an air campaign in Syria in response to Iranian attacks on U.S. bases, employing its two regional carrier strike groups and other assets in the Arabian Peninsula. The goal is eroding Iran’s combat capacity.

Washington can also can resurrect sanctions against Iran. The U.S. has let several financial sanctions lapse in pursuit of a chimerical détente that Tehran views with contempt. Refreezing Iranian assets and pressuring third-party clearinghouses such as Qatar and the United Arab Emirates to isolate Iranian money would hamper Tehran’s ability to project power in the short term. A few months of such pressure crippled Iranian exports in the late 2010s and ate into the regime’s resources. Working with Europe on a comprehensive technological monitoring program to disrupt Iranian and Russian cooperation also would help Ukraine.

Most critically, the administration should publicly accept the need for Israeli military action in Syria and Lebanon in the next year. By shifting rhetoric from support for Israel’s anti-Hamas campaign to support for Israel’s anti-Iran campaign, the U.S. can signal its enduring commitment to a peaceful Mideast. This will position the U.S. as the only viable partner for the Gulf Arabs. It will open other opportunities with Saudi Arabia and the U.A.E. that the administration has sought without success since the Ukraine war began. America must move the Arab world toward Washington, not leave it on the sidelines.

Mr. Cropsey is the president of the Yorktown Institute. He served as a naval officer and as deputy undersecretary of the Navy and is author of “Mayday” and “Seablindness.”

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Re: Catherine Herridge: Black Swan coming
« Reply #1545 on: December 28, 2023, 05:43:35 AM »
I agree with her but must point out predicting the unpredictable is a bit of a contradiction.

Author of Black Swan doesn't even count worldwide covid pandemic as a black swan event as it was predictable. (I question that.)

At this time coming into 2020, Trump and the US economy were rolling, covid was hidden in Wuhan, Derrick Chauvin was a respected officer, George Floyd was high on fentanyl,  Antifa has no venue, Donetsk was Ukrainian, America still voted at polling places with election judges, Marco Rubio was ascending and Biden was a political dud.  Well that last one never changed.
« Last Edit: December 28, 2023, 05:46:20 AM by DougMacG »

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Re: US Foreign Policy & Geopolitics
« Reply #1546 on: December 28, 2023, 08:48:17 AM »
Respect for Herridge as a reporter.  A big loss for FOX when she left.



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Four Font Fear Redux
« Reply #1549 on: January 29, 2024, 07:52:46 AM »
Attempting to spread the topics addressed broadly here among the relevant threads.

This piece contains references to LOTS of scary prescience, noting predictions of current entanglements made earlier. Indeed, allow me to pile on: if Biden is reelected or some other “Progressive” torchbearer replaces the ambulatory corpse he appears to have become, the partially executed four front World War III will be fully realized as our enemies know Biden and his “Progressive” handlers don’t have the aptitude or stomach for a world war, that the US is currently as politically fractured (and intentionally made so) as it has been since the 1860s, and that in our environmental and Ukraine munition supply zeal we’ve demonstrated that we are unable to arm ourselves to the degree needed to engage on the scale imagined here:

https://www.realcleardefense.com/articles/2024/01/27/the_geopolitics_of_world_war_iii_1007840.html