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Zmeselo
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America Against the World: Everyone Is a “Frenemy”. Putin is a “Killer” Russia “Must Pay the Price”

Post by Zmeselo » 26 Mar 2021, 00:01





America Against the World: Everyone Is a “Frenemy”. Putin is a “Killer” Russia “Must Pay the Price”

Anyone who expected a change in tone in foreign policy due to the transition from Trump to Biden has to be disappointed.

By Philip Giraldi

https://www.globalresearch.ca/america-a ... my/5740956

25 March 2021

There are certainly a number of reasons why the United States government is now only viewed favorably by the Israelis, but totally tone deaf foreign and economic policies have to be right up there in how the world sees Washington. Rather than conform to how other nations are expected to behave, the U.S. has elevated “exceptionalism” and “leader of the free world” nonsense to a dogma where it believes itself allowed to behave without restraint in defense of what it claims to be its interests. As all countries act in support of interests, that would at least be understandable but the odd thing is that the various constituencies that make up the U.S. government do not even have any clear vision of what is and is not good for the country and American people as a whole.

President Joe Biden’s recent labeling of Russian President Vladimir Putin as a “killer” combined with a threat to make Russia “pay a price” due to its alleged meddling in American elections is a perfect example of imperial over-reach by the clowns currently prowling the corridors of power in Washington. The not so thinly veiled threat was derived from an intelligence assessment that claimed that Russia had favored the candidacy of Donald Trump and had been circulating disinformation to damage Biden and his family. The assessment provided no evidence to back-up what was claimed, which was innocuous in any event, but it was enough to trigger a malaprop response from the U.S. president. The more canny Putin has responded by suggesting a live televised “debate” with Biden, who, refused to take up the offer, knowing that if he had he would have quite likely “gaffed” his way to incoherence.

Some other recent stories indicate, both that Washington does not even know how to be nice to its friends and that the White House is hardly in control of what goes on its own doorstep. There is considerable discussion over the Nord Stream 2 gas pipeline, which is planned to connect Russian gas with German customers.

It would be good business for Russia and also for Germany, since the gas is cheaper than other available supplies. The Trump Administration announced that it would oppose the project on “security grounds” and last week Secretary of State Tony Blinken stated that it was a bad deal because,
this pipeline is a Russian geopolitical project intended to divide Europe and weaken European energy security.
He also warned that companies working on the pipeline must cease work immediately, https://www.dw.com/en/nord-stream-2-us- ... a-56920315 or face “harsh” U.S. sanctions. Most of the companies are Western European and nominally NATO allies of the U.S. and Nord Stream 2 will likely be completed for good economic reasons.



Washington will throw a hissy fit, in part because it wants to sell the more expensive American gas to the Germans. Biden is, for what it’s worth, continuing and doubling down on the Trump policy towards the project. It is a totally unnecessary insult to America’s European allies, has nothing to do with national security, and if Washington kills the project, it will give fuel to anti-U.S. sentiment while also serving to increase tension with Russia.

Another story that keeps popping up in the British media concerns Washington’s unwillingness to deal with a driving incident in August 2019, that killed an English teenager. The driver of the car that struck motorbiker Harry Dunn was Anne Sacoolas, a U.S. citizen, whose husband worked in an unspecified job in intelligence at RAF Croughton, an airbase in central England. She was driving her husband’s SUV on the wrong side of the road and the British police initially charged her with,
causing death by dangerous driving.
The U.S. Embassy quickly became involved, flying Sacoolas home on a military flight and reporting to the British authorities that she was protected by diplomatic immunity and would not be answerable for what had occurred. The British government and media did not agree and, in truth, Sacoolas was not necessarily covered by immunity because she was not a diplomat and was not performing any official function when the incident occurred. The British Foreign Office submitted a request for extradition so Sacoolas could face trial, but it was rejected by Secretary of State Mike Pompeo.

Currently, the parents of Harry Dunn are suing in a Virginia court https://news.yahoo.com/mystery-american ... 10440.html for civil damages against Sacoolas and the U.S. judge has let the case proceed. Anne Sacoolas is reportedly in hiding and has offered to do https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-england-nor ... e-56326406 community service in the U.S., while also making a cash donation to a suitable charity in Harry’s memory.

The tale has taken an interesting turn in that it has been suggested, though not confirmed, that Anne was an intelligence officer like her husband Jonathan, which may have been the motive for removing her from England in the first place.

But the point is that Anne Sacoolas should have stayed in the UK, where she would have had a fair hearing over an incident that was ultimately an accident. Instead, the United States has chosen to play hard ball with a close ally and friend. The British public and media have not forgotten Anne Sacoolas and remain angry, about how the U.S. responded to Harry’s death. It is reported that Prime Minister Boris Johnson has personally raised the issue of Sacoolas with both the Trump and Biden Administrations, stating that
We have always asked for extradition. The denial of that we have always seen as a denial of justice.
It would be the right thing to do from many perspectives to let the case be handled in British courts, but there is no sign that Washington will be accommodating.

So the beat goes on.

Anyone who expected a change in tone in foreign policy due to the transition from Trump to Biden, has to be disappointed.

Insulting Russia’s leader, telling the Germans how to run their economy, and refusing a reasonable British extradition request are all in a day’s work for the White House, which appears to be oblivious to the damage that is being done to broad U.S. interests.

*

Philip M. Giraldi, Ph.D., is Executive Director of the Council for the National Interest, a 501(c)3 tax deductible educational foundation (Federal ID Number #52-1739023) that seeks a more interests-based U.S. foreign policy in the Middle East. Website is https://councilforthenationalinterest.org address is P.O. Box 2157, Purcellville VA 20134 and its email is [email protected]

He is a frequent contributor to Global Research.

Zmeselo
Senior Member+
Posts: 37345
Joined: 30 Jul 2010, 20:43

Re: America Against the World: Everyone Is a “Frenemy”. Putin is a “Killer” Russia “Must Pay the Price”

Post by Zmeselo » 26 Mar 2021, 00:23





🇮🇹 #CoppieBartali stage 3

What a ride by the Eritrean guys, today! 29th for @ghebreigzabhie, 18th @henokmulubrhan & 5th
@NATNAELTESFATS1! All the guys stayed on their places, in the GC. Henok, even managed to improve improve his!

(Zero_X: @ZXCycling)


Zmeselo
Senior Member+
Posts: 37345
Joined: 30 Jul 2010, 20:43

Re: America Against the World: Everyone Is a “Frenemy”. Putin is a “Killer” Russia “Must Pay the Price”

Post by Zmeselo » 26 Mar 2021, 02:43



In-depth : Turkey's growing influence in the Horn of Africa

Faisal Ali

https://english.alaraby.co.uk/english/i ... -of-africa


Turkey has increased its profile considerably in East Africa over the past decade. [Getty]

24 March, 2021

Analysis: In the last decade, Turkey has moved from being a peripheral country with little presence in the Horn of Africa to one of the region's most indispensable partners.

The skylines of Djibouti and Mogadishu, two vibrant port cities in the Horn of Africa, https://english.alaraby.co.uk/english/i ... -of-africa are today bedecked by the minarets and domes of Turkish built Ottoman style grand mosques.

Completed in the last decade, the two mosques signal Ankara's interest in cultivating relations https://english.alaraby.co.uk/english/n ... s-imf-debt with East African countries and ensuring its visibility in a region where Turkey has considerably increased its profile in the last decade.

Turkey distinguishes itself from Africa's European, Chinese and American partners https://english.alaraby.co.uk/english/i ... e-in-sudan through its shared religious identity with the region, says Ann Fitz-Gerald, Director of the Balsillie School of International Affairs and an East Africa security analyst. This common ground allows it to build on its reputation as a long-term NATO member and trusted economic partner.

In Djibouti, the Abdulhamid Han II Mosque, with a capacity of 6,000, is the largest in the country. The project came about during a 2015 visit by President Recep Tayyip Erdogan to Djibouti, where President Ismail Omar Gulleh told him that he wanted to see an Ottoman mosque in his capital.

Turkey's parliamentary speaker Mustafa Sentop attended its inaugural Friday prayer in 2019 when it opened to the public. In December 2017, Gueelleh returned the favour, his third visit to Turkey, at which point relations between the countries had already been gaining momentum.

________________________________________________
Turkey is interested in cultivating relations with East African countries and ensuring its visibility in a region where Ankara has considerably increased its profile in the last decade.

________________________________________________

Turkish Airlines has direct flights between the countries, while TIKA, Turkey's aid agency, has established offices and projects across Djibouti. By 2018, Turkey agreed to finance and construct the Ambouli Friendship Dam. https://english.alaraby.co.uk/english/i ... -of-africa

Turkey's ambassador to Djibouti said that whilst the mosque project was "socially and architecturally important", the dam would have a tangible impact in water management in a flood prone part of the country.

Djibouti's ambassador to Turkey told https://www.dailysabah.com/diplomacy/20 ... in-country Daily Sabah that his country wants to provide room for Turkey in the region because it views Turkey as a "strategic partner".

In Somalia, the presence of the Turkish state has also been much more visible following a high profile visit by president Erdogan to Mogadishu in 2011, making him the first non-African leader to visit the country in twenty years.


Read more: Troubled waters: Ports and power in the Horn of Africa. https://english.alaraby.co.uk/english/i ... -of-africa

Five years later, Turkey opened
its largest overseas embassy in Mogadishu and began cooperating with Somali authorities in a variety of fields, from health and infrastructure to education and security.

Relations between the countries initially focussed on humanitarian challenges, says Abdinor Dahir, a researcher at TRT World Research Centre, but Turkey noticed early on how much potential there was in Somalia.
Between 2011 and 2013, Somalia was struggling with famine and the relationship focussed on humanitarian issues,
Dahir told The New Arab.
After that the relationship became more comprehensive and expanded into development assistance and state-building.
This assistance involves everything from the mundane equipping of government ministries, to more complex challenges such as training cadets at Camp TURKSOM for the Somali National Army, Dahir said, and differentiates Turkey from other MENA powers in that it has the capacity to deliver high level development assistance.

Additional Somali troops have also enrolled in commando training programs in the southwestern Turkish province of Isparta, with a batch of elite units returning http://snaradio.so/so/articles/3252/Cut ... adan-Cadde in early March.

Whilst security cooperation has played an important role in bilateral relations, Turkish construction firms have completed critical projects in the country, including building https://www.tika.gov.tr/en/news/tika_wi ... alia-42894 Somalia's new parliament.
_________________________________________________
Turkey distinguishes itself from Africa's European, Chinese and American partners through its shared religious identity with the region.

_________________________________________________
Ten years of trust-based relationship building with Somalia has enabled infrastructural and business investments that added a tangible element to its soft power diplomacy,
Fitz-Gerald told The New Arab.

In a widely publicised official visit to Ankara, Somalia's Turkish-educated justice minister joked https://www.aa.com.tr/en/africa/new-som ... ad/2012804 that
it wouldn't be a lie to say that Turkish has become the second language of Somalia.
Turkey's efforts have borne fruit with Somali officials.

In February, Middle East Eye reported that Turkey intended to launch its mission to the moon from Somalia. Local media also reported https://www.reuters.com/article/us-turk ... SKBN1ZJ1DZ in early 2020 that Turkey was invited by Somalia to explore its seas for oil.

Turkey's support for Somalia's fledging central government, however, hasn't come without a cost. Earlier this year two Turkish nationals working on a road between Mogadishu and Afgoye were killed in an attack by Al-Shabab.

A similar attack https://english.alaraby.co.uk/english/n ... li-capital targeting the Turkish project killed 79 Somali nationals and wounded Turkish engineers in late 2019. In the summer of 2020, Al-Shabab conducted an attack on the Turkish base in Mogadishu.

Somalia is now also locked in a political crisis which has threatened to embroil Somalia's Turkish trained Gorgor and Haramad elite units. Opposition politicians alleged that Turkish and American trained forces were used against them to suppress protests, urging those commanders to be dismissed and for the military to remain out of politics.

Turkey recently offered https://www.radiodalsan.com/en/2021/03/ ... s-impasse/ its support in resolving Somalia's electoral crisis, with reports https://www.garoweonline.com/en/news/wo ... ion-crisis indicating a possible visit by foreign minister Mevlut Cavusoglu to Mogadishu soon.


Read more: What will Biden's presidency mean for the Horn of Africa? https://english.alaraby.co.uk/english/i ... -of-africa

Turkey's security footprint has also grown beyond Somalia and has attracted the attention of East Africa's two hegemon's, Kenya and Ethiopia, whose interests have a nexus point in Somalia where both are important players in the country's security matrix.

Kenyan and Ethiopian peacekeepers have supported the Somali government's fight against Al-Shabab as part of AMISOM, an African Union mission to help stabilise the country. Troops from both countries are also deployed bilaterally in various parts of southern Somalia.
Both Ethiopia and Kenya have long-invested in the fight against Al-Shabaab,
Fitz-Gerald says,
and will wish to see Turkey continue its military cooperation in Somalia by propping up the capacity of the Somali National Army to defend against this ongoing terrorist threat.
The Turkish approach in East Africa differs from West Africa, says Abdinoor Dahir, in that Turkey
has ended up on a collision course
httpss://mg.co.za/africa/2020-12-05-turkey-goes-on-charm-offensive-in-west-africa/ with France which is a major power in West Africa. In the Horn, Turkey didn't challenge traditional regional powers or their interests but looked to build ties based on trust and common interests.
Earlier this year, Kenya's military ordered 118 Hizir four-wheel drive personnel carriers from Turkish manufacturer Katmerciler. The purchase, intended to help in Kenya's fight with Somali militant group Al-Shabab, introduced Turkish armoured vehicles to the African market.
_________________________________________________
Turkey has carved out a niche role through its projection of soft power, economic development and security engagement in the Horn of Africa.

_________________________________________________

A month after the order was placed, reports began to emerge https://www.africaintelligence.com/east ... 646347-eve about a role for Turkey in an ongoing maritime dispute between Somalia and Kenya over an energy rich triangle which juts out from their shared border.
Turkey is one of the most influential countries in the Horn of Africa,
says https://www.the-star.co.ke/siasa/2021-0 ... of-africa/ Peter Kagwanja of the Nairobi based Africa Policy Institute.
To construct new engagements, we need to craft wide frameworks, project regional power and anchor it in sustainable partnerships with Turkey.
Ethiopia, one of Africa's largest markets and fastest growing economies, has also been an important target of Turkish diplomacy and investment. In early February, Ethiopian FM Demeke Mekonnen visited Ankara to inaugurate the Ethiopian embassy's new building in Ankara where the Turkish FM Cavusoglu was also present.

Speaking at the ceremony, Cavusoglu recounted the historical ties between the countries dating back to 1896, but the focus of the event was very much on the present and future of bilateral ties.


Read more: A gateway to Africa: Russia's new naval base in Sudan. https://english.alaraby.co.uk/english/i ... e-in-sudan

Turkey today is the second largest foreign investor in Ethiopia after China, http://www.xinhuanet.com/english/2020-0 ... an.,UNCTAD)%20Report%202020%20has%20disclosed. according to the Ethiopian Investment Commission, and has close to 200 companies employing 20,000 people.

Whilst Turkish businesses have faced some challenges in Ethiopia's difficult business climate, in the fields of clothes and textiles Turkish products have made gains https://addisfortune.news/small-scale-i ... or-turkey/ in Addis Ababa's makeshift markets and stores in recent months, with shop owners preferring to import their goods from Turkey rather than Dubai.
We lacked a good sense of judgement to navigate and forecast the changes, but we know now, and we're sticking with Turkey,
one shop owner told Addis Fortune.

Ankara's outreach even led Ethiopia to signal its openness to Turkish mediation in its border conflict with Sudan, during FM Demeke Mekonnen's visit to Turkey.

Positive developments in relations between Turkey and Egypt also led Turkey to offer its mediation between Cairo and Addis Ababa on the Nile dam dispute. https://english.alaraby.co.uk/english/i ... r-disaster

Turkey has carved out a "niche role" says Anne Fitz-Gerald through its projection of soft power, economic development and security engagement in the Horn of Africa. Abdinoor agrees, and adds that Turkey's diplomacy and investment have turned it from an actor with little presence, to a country that all in the region are interested in upgrading ties with.


Faisal Ali is an Istanbul based multimedia journalist. He writes about East African politics.

Follow him on Twitter: @fromadic92

Zmeselo
Senior Member+
Posts: 37345
Joined: 30 Jul 2010, 20:43

Re: America Against the World: Everyone Is a “Frenemy”. Putin is a “Killer” Russia “Must Pay the Price”

Post by Zmeselo » 26 Mar 2021, 03:06

No business as usual in he HoA, anymore!

The FG of Somalia wrote a protest letter to the Royal Norwegian Embassy, on an offensive Tweet on Somalia Elections.



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