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Sorted by :  July  2022
by Vladimir Danilov on 31 Jul 2022 0 Comment

It will hardly be a revelation for anyone that the United States, being historically the “stepchild” of Europe from where the mass-scale population of the New World began, has always manifested a jealous attitude towards their Alma Mater. This process has especially aggravated in the recent decades when America entered the path of severe competitive struggle...

by Salman Rafi Sheikh on 30 Jul 2022 1 Comment

When Russia began its special military operation in Ukraine and the West responded with sanctions and threats of completely cutting off energy supplies from Russia, little did European states realise that their threat will come back to haunt them within months. The constantly rising cost of living in Europe (and the US) and the spectre of gas shortage for th...

by Batiushka on 29 Jul 2022 0 Comment

As schoolchildren will tell you, the names of the continents begin and end with the same letter, A: Asia, Africa, America, Australia, Antarctica. There is one exception: Europe, which though still beginning and ending with the same letter, the letter is not A, but E. Why the difference? Is it perhaps because Europe is not really a Continent? After all, it is...

by António Jacinto Pascoal on 28 Jul 2022 1 Comment

Things are not going as well for the western world as expected. Of course, we can condemn Russia’s invasion of Ukraine (or “special operation” as the Russians call it), but it’s not possible to look back at events, erasing what happened in Maidan Square in 2014, with the extreme-right coup d’état (Svoboda party used considerable resources, which included tho...

by Pepe Escobar on 27 Jul 2022 1 Comment

Those were the days, in 1955, at the legendary Bandung conference in Indonesia, when the newly emancipated Global South started dreaming of building a new world, via what became configured later in 1961 in Belgrade as the Non-Aligned Movement (NAM). The Empire of Chaos – and Lies – would never allow a starring role for NAM. So it played dirty: everything fro...

by Yuriy Zinin on 26 Jul 2022 0 Comment

The Arabic portal “Elaph” has called anti-Russian sanctions the “friendly and bitter fire of the USA in Europe” that has led to negative consequences for the economies of the countries of the Old World. They suffered from them after announcing the rejection of Russian gas, with no clear alternative to replace it. The portal’s opinion is woven into the flow ...

by Valery Kulikov on 25 Jul 2022 0 Comment

The West, in its intention to hurt Russia with sanctions, has shot itself in the foot, many media outlets have been writing for a while now. The result is high inflation, energy and food shortages, recession, and many political and social problems that Europeans don’t know how to deal with. The IMF itself admits that the promotion of a spiral of unilateral s...

by James O’Neill on 24 Jul 2022 1 Comment

One of the notable features of recent years has been the increasing division between the planet’s rich powers and the rest. The former group consists primarily of the European nations, plus the United States, Canada, Australia, New Zealand and Japan. It has increasingly tried to expand its influence, most obviously at the recent meeting of the NATO organisat...

by James M Dorsey on 23 Jul 2022 3 Comments

I2-U2, the Indo-West Asian quad, has boasted its first success with the acquisition by Indian billionaire Gautam Adani of Haifa Port. The acquisition was announced days after an I2-U2 virtual summit during US President Joe Biden’s visit last week to the Middle East. The acquisition by a close associate of Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi, in a joint bid w...

by Eric Zuesse on 22 Jul 2022 0 Comment

Adolf Hitler was passionately a figure of “The West,” and believed not ONLY in White Supremacism as necessarily being a Euro-Atlantic supremacism over all other cultures, but he was determined to make that a specifically GERMAN global White-supremacy. On 25 July 1945, the founder of the Cold War, Harry S. Truman, became convinced by his hero Dwight Eisenhow...

by Brian Berletic on 21 Jul 2022 1 Comment

While Western governments and the Western media continue clinging to the hope of an eventual “victory” for Kiev’s forces in Ukraine, the “frontline” is quietly being moved back to western Ukraine and even Poland just across the border. Recent pledges by NATO as well as arms deliveries this year and next appear to be headed in the direction of using Poland as...

by James M Dorsey on 20 Jul 2022 0 Comment

US President Joe Biden’s controversial pilgrimage to Jeddah is part of a broader and more complex geopolitical puzzle with multiple Gulf and Red Sea littoral states attempting to hedge their bets and play rival global and regional powers against one another. Widely seen as a knee fall after the president refused, since coming to office, to interact with Saud...

by Michael Brenner on 19 Jul 2022 0 Comment

These Classic neo-cons are staunch interventionists – always in a just cause. Or so they proclaim. They stress human rights, democracy promotion, women’s rights, preventing abuses like ethnic cleansing, the four freedoms, etc. They fall under the rubric of R2P – Responsibility To Protect. That principle was first enunciated during the wars of the ex-Yugoslav...

by Michael Brenner on 18 Jul 2022 0 Comment

Not all shared this vision of a Brave New World. They weren’t content to ride the historic wave of liberal teleology – with just a nudge here and a little coup there. These self-declared realists, in truth, thought more like Machtpolitik Europeans than idealistic Americans. The pivot of their thoughts and feelings were power constellations and any devils (re...

by Michael Brenner on 17 Jul 2022 1 Comment

The latest formulation of a binary world pits the so-called democracies against the so-called autocrats. The United States is the self-designated champion of the former while China and Russia lead the array of autocrats. In effect, it’s a reversion to long-running democracy / capitalism vs Communism all-embracing conflict of the Cold War. Today’s version has...

by James M Dorsey on 16 Jul 2022 2 Comments

US and European acquiescence in Turkey’s long-standing refusal to honour Kurdish ethnic, cultural, and political rights came home to roost when Turkey initially objected to Finnish and Swedish membership in the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation (NATO). Ultimately, Turkey postponed potential conflict in NATO by dropping its initial objection to Finland and S...

by Ramtanu Maitra on 15 Jul 2022 0 Comment

The latest news indicates President Gotabaya “Terminator” Rajapaksa has managed to flee to the Maldives. He was hanging near the Colombo Airport in a naval installation for a few days trying to secure flight seats. It did not come through. Nor did come through his request to the US Embassy for a visa to enter the United States. Eventually, in the early hours...

by Thierry Meyssan on 14 Jul 2022 0 Comment

The result of the French presidential and legislative elections weakens both the Executive and the Legislative branches and blocks the political situation. The voters refused to support the regime and endorse its decisions. Since 2005, they have been saying what they were fighting against while their leaders ignored them. What could restore the country is th...

by James M Dorsey on 13 Jul 2022 0 Comment

The jihadist dilemma posed by soccer as a recruitment and bonding tool on the one hand and a convenient target on the other was symbolized by expressions in stadia of the appeal of jihadist groups like the Islamic State that reflects more often than not on domestic political grievances or a conspiratorial worldview rooted in puritan interpretations of Islam ...

by James M Dorsey on 12 Jul 2022 0 Comment

In many ways, the Black September attack on the Olympic Games in Munich in 1972 discloses little about the evolution of the targeting of sporting events by political and religious militants even though it remains to date the incident with the greatest number of fatalities. If anything, the Munich attack was never replicated in scale and drama. It introduced ...

by Michael Brenner on 11 Jul 2022 0 Comment

Detective stories have been making a splash on European screens for the past decade. Some attract top-notch directors, actors and script writers. They are far superior to anything that appears over here – whether on TV or from Hollywood. Part of the impetus has come from the remarkable Italian series Montelbano, the name of a Sicilian commissario in Ragusa (...

by Thierry Meyssan on 10 Jul 2022 0 Comment

While the Anglo-Saxons have already succeeded in excluding Russia from the Council of Europe and are preparing to prevent it from participating in OSCE meetings, they are working to sink the European Union by creating a competing structure in Central Europe: the Three Seas Initiative. In doing so, they are taking up an old Polish project aimed at developing ...

by Vladimir Terehov on 09 Jul 2022 1 Comment

India is increasingly making its presence felt in the international political arena. And as India’s influence grows in the current stage of the Great World Game, so the major world powers are competing to bring New Delhi into their own camp. India itself is no passive onlooker in this process – with considerable skill it is managing to play off against ea...

by Salman Rafi Sheikh on 08 Jul 2022 0 Comment

Military conflicts are a deadly – and costly – business, especially for those who fight them directly. But these conflicts also benefit others directly and indirectly. Those involved in the military-industrial complex benefit from both actual and potential conflicts. This has been the most famous story in the US and continues to be in the present era, as I e...

by Guilherme Wilbert on 07 Jul 2022 0 Comment

Uzbekistan, a relatively small country wedged between landlocked Turkmenistan to the south and Kazakhstan to the north, is undergoing state reshaping and suffering from protests that some analysts are calling “foreign interference” in what is known as Karakalpakstan. Karakalpakstan is a relatively sovereign region within Uzbekistan. Relatively because it sha...

by R Hariharan on 06 Jul 2022 0 Comment

Chinese philosopher Lao Tzu (also known as Lao Tze)’s well known saying “A journey of a thousand miles begins with a single step” is coming true in Sri Lanka’s economic recovery process. However, Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe seems to have spent the month trying to find the first single step to begin the journey. It was not his fault that the recovery ...

by Dmitry Bokarev on 05 Jul 2022 1 Comment

The modern world is torn by contradictions: the US and its allies, accustomed to global domination, seek to maintain and expand their position at the expense of the interests of other countries, leading to crises and conflicts. In the Middle East, wars have been raging for decades, and in Europe, fighting has broken out in Ukraine. Peace has so far prevailed...

by Valery Kulikov on 04 Jul 2022 0 Comment

Drugs and terrorism have become an instrument of international politics. Drugs have been increasingly used by certain actors in international life, especially the United States and its Western allies, to enhance their hegemony. Such actions not only destroy the youth and entire nations, but also create chains of corruption in countries which are then used fo...

by Michael Brenner on 03 Jul 2022 0 Comment

This is an attempt to construct a narrative of the Ukraine crisis over the course of 2021 and early 2022. It combines straightforward description with interpretation of the decisions made and the actions taken. The latter is based on the public record supplemented by communications with some persons who have had more direct knowledge of events. Context is im...

by Michael Brenner on 02 Jul 2022 0 Comment

Washington has a weakness for intellectual fads. Think of COIN, R2P, New World Order – among many others. One that is gaining currency is The Thucydides Trap as popularized in the much-praised book of that name by Graham Allison of Harvard and the writings of John Mearsheimer. Even Joe Biden wrote a laudatory blurb for the former. The term goes under many sy...

by Ken Freeland on 01 Jul 2022 1 Comment

The verdict is in, and Roe v. Wade is now a dead letter. This is tremendous news for those of us who have felt the onerous burden of this usurpation by the Supremes these many years, and feel that the constitutional framework of our republic has been to this degree restored. But is it an unalloyed good? I argue that it is not; even though this decision to ov...

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