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Sorted by :  May  2019
by James M Dorsey on 31 May 2019 1 Comment

The Indian-backed Iranian port of Chabahar has emerged as a major loophole in a tightening military and economic noose and ever harsher US sanctions that President Donald J. Trump, reluctant to be sucked into yet another war, sees as the best way to either force Tehran to its knees or achieve regime change. Alice Wells, the State Department’s assistant secre...

by Israel Shamir on 30 May 2019 4 Comments

Jeeves, the excellent valet of Mr Wooster, had an ace up his sleeve: if the going was tough, he used his access to the records of the Junior Ganymede club, and there he could find embarrassing stuff against anybody who had ever employed a valet or a butler, for these gentleman’s gentlemen were obliged to inscribe in the club’s book all imprudent exploits of ...

by Ashok B Sharma on 29 May 2019 1 Comment

The results of the elections in the world’s largest democracy have confirmed the effective poll strategy of Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Bharatiya Janata Party president Amit Shah. The BJP alone bagged 303 seats in the Lower House of Parliament, surpassing the magic figure of 272 needed for a simple majority and the tally of 282 scored in 2014. This make...

by Sandhya Jain on 28 May 2019 35 Comments

Prime Minister Narendra Modi is accused of making the 2019 general election a presidential race centred on his formidable personality and powerful oratory, thus ensuring the landslide victory of the Bharatiya Janata Party (303; NDA 353). However, his principal challenger, Rahul Gandhi, made the contest monarchical with his family-driven rhetoric and...

by James M Dorsey on 27 May 2019 1 Comment

A fully loaded Chinese oil tanker ploughing its way eastwards from two Iranian oil terminals raises questions of how far Beijing is willing to go in defying US sanctions amid a mounting US military build-up in the Gulf and a US-China trade war. The sailing from Iran of the Pacific Bravo takes on added significance with US strategy likely to remain focused on...

by Jaibans Singh on 26 May 2019 4 Comments

“Indian Army is a very potent, responsive and accountable element of national power. It remains committed to be able to take on any challenge as far as external threats are concerned and similarly take on any internal disturbances when called upon to do so. So, as far as the Army is concerned we always carry on in a professional manner and a very strong code...

by Punarvasu Parekh on 25 May 2019 9 Comments

India is firmly set on the road to become a modern Hindu Rashtra. That is the most important message from the Lok Sabha elections 2019. Seven decades after the independence, Hindus are coming into their own. It is not the end of their troubles, but it marks the beginning of the phase in which they are taking their destiny in their own hands. If that is “comm...

by Peter Koenig on 24 May 2019 2 Comments

As of May 10, Mr. Trump has arbitrarily increased tariffs on Chinese goods imported into the US, worth about 200 billion dollars, from 10% to 25%. It is an action without any foundation. An action that makes no sense at all, as China can and will retaliate – and retaliate much stronger than what the impact of the US’s new “sanctions” bear – because these arb...

by Thierry Meyssan on 23 May 2019 1 Comment

When the Notre-Dame fire began on the evening of April 15, 2019, all the French media and many foreign outlets focused on the burning cathedral. Many foreign media started their newscasts with this news, but not France2. The public channel had planned to devote its program to President Macron’s announced speech concluding the “Great National Debate”. The edi...

by P M Ravindran on 22 May 2019 15 Comments

May 23, 2019 possibly has the whole world waiting with bated breath for the results of the general elections in India. I am not a psephologist but share the feel good factor that makes many predict a definite victory for Narendra Modi. His first term has to be considered successful for merely applying brakes on a nation that was fast sliding into an...

by Martin Berger on 21 May 2019 1 Comment

Washington’s overt aggressive behavior on the international stage provoked by its desire to impose its own vision of the way that the Middle East must look in the future has pushed most of its traditional allies away from it. So it’s only natural that the US keeps losing allies left and right, gradually alienating Qatar, Iraq, Saudi Arabia and Turkey. The mu...

by James M Dorsey on 20 May 2019 0 Comment

Pakistan risks falling off the tightrope it walks as it attempts to balance its relations with rivals Saudi Arabia and Iran. Developments in recent days, including this weekend’s Baloch nationalist attack on a luxury hotel in the strategic port city of Gwadar [May 12-ed] and a legal dispute over completion of a gas pipeline against the backdrop of Saudi-Iran...

by Vladimir Terehov on 19 May 2019 0 Comment

On 30 April 2019, the former Emperor of Japan, Akihito, abdicated, and the next day his 59-year-old son, Naruhito, took over the Chrysanthemum Throne. This signaled the end of the 30-year period in Japan’s modern history, known as “peace everywhere” (or Heisei), and the start of the new epoch, denoted by two Kanji characters, which, on transcription into the...

by Pepe Escobar on 18 May 2019 5 Comments

Let’s start with the “long” 16th century - which, as with the 21st, also saw a turbulent process of marketization. At that time, the Jesuits and the Counter-Reformation were trying to rebound across Asia - but within a context where the rivalry between the Iberian superpowers of the age, Spain and Portugal, still lingered. The Reformation first attached itse...

by James M Dorsey on 17 May 2019 0 Comment

Mounting tension between the Trump administration and Iran are likely to shed light on US dynamics shaping today’s geopolitical environment. Looming large is the figure of US national security advisor John Bolton, a proponent of a muscular US foreign policy in which the United States employs military force to impose its will and fortify its superpower status...

by Thierry Meyssan on 16 May 2019 2 Comments

The liberation of the zone administered by Daesh as a state does not mean the end of this jihadist organisation. Indeed, while Daesh is a creation of the NATO Intelligence services, it represents an ideology which mobilises jihadists and may outlive it. Al-Qaida was an auxiliary army for NATO – we saw them fight in Afghanistan, then in Bosnia-Herzegovina, an...

by Thierry Meyssan on 15 May 2019 1 Comment

After the Second World War, in 1947, ambassador George Kennan created the policy of containment [1] and President Harry Truman constituted the apparatus of national security (CIA, Joint Committee of the Chiefs of Staff, National Security Council) [2]. Washington and London then turned against Moscow, which had only recently been their ally. They were plannin...

by Sandhya Jain on 14 May 2019 27 Comments

It is unproductive to speculate why, but a vocal section of the Western commentariat is showing an increasing intolerance towards strong and nation-centric leaders in the rest of the world. Three notable examples are Vladimir Putin, Xi Jinping, and Narendra Modi. Putin won in May 2018, Xi Jinping can’t be toppled, and Modi is currently fighting...

by James M Dorsey on 13 May 2019 1 Comment

The effectiveness of China’s effort to brainwash Uyghurs and Central Asian Muslims in the troubled north-western province of Xinjiang may be tested. With the recent release of 40 Uyghur wives of Pakistani traders, businessmen and professionals, some of the former re-education camp detainees hope that after three months of observation by Xinjiang authorities,...

by R Hariharan on 12 May 2019 2 Comments

Abu Bakr Al-Baghdadi, the elusive chief of the Islamic State (IS) in a rare video released after five years on April 28, 2019, has claimed that the IS was responsible for carrying out the Easter Sunday serial suicide blasts in Sri Lanka that left 253 people dead and over 500 injured. The video said that the attacks were in retaliation for the loss of Baguz, ...

by B S Harishankar on 11 May 2019 15 Comments

The Cathedral of the Resurrection of Lahore proudly exhibits a small cross in a glass case. It is known as the dubious “Taxila Cross”. When the cross was discovered in 1935, Cuthbert King, the British deputy commissioner of Rawalpindi, knew of The Acts of St Thomas and seized upon this find as ‘proof’ of the existence of Christianity in northwest India...

by N S Rajaram on 10 May 2019 11 Comments

It is now confirmed that Rajiv Gandhi in 1987, when he was prime minister used the carrier INS Viraat for a family vacation for his family (Sonia’s family) and some friends. A carrier does not go alone. It is accompanied by escort vessels like destroyers, frigates and a submarine or two. So what you have is not a carrier, but a carrier group or carrier...

by Peter Koenig on 09 May 2019 3 Comments

Sri Lanka, Easter Sunday, 21 April 2019: More than half a dozen bomb blasts shook the country killing from 250 to more than 350 people. Depending on who counts, the death toll varies. The devastation took place in in several Catholic churches and luxury hotels. Other explosions, including from – what they say – are suicide bombers, have since killed...

by Punarvasu Parekh on 08 May 2019 6 Comments

As the country is observing the 150th birth anniversary of Mahatma Gandhi, there are voices – some quite shrill and strident – exhorting fellow countrymen to come out of his lingering influence in one area where he failed miserably – communal harmony or, more bluntly, Hindu-Muslim relations. One such voice is Radha Rajan, whose latest book, The Shrinking Hin...

by Andre Vltchek on 07 May 2019 6 Comments

In Indonesia, both presidential candidates have declared victory, just a few days after the elections that were held on 17th April, 2019. Both of them are pro-business, both Muslim, and both insist that the Communist Party should continue to be banned. Neither of them is even thinking about stopping their country from committing one of the bloodiest genocide...

by Jaibans Singh on 06 May 2019 2 Comments

The people of Pakistan are looking for a game changer political leadership. It is so because, for too long now, the Pakistan Army has maintained proxy control over politicians and political parties. It has either ruled through dictatorships or by proxy, as it is doing presently by placing a pliable Imran Khan at the helm of the political spectrum. Such a sit...

by Ramin Mazaher on 05 May 2019 3 Comments

If 7,000 Greeks can stop the Persian empire at the narrow pass at Thermopylae, I think it’s absurd to think Iran can’t stop 20-30% of global oil traffic at the 3 kilometer-wide shipping lane in the Strait of Hormuz. That would, of course provoke a global crisis and economic disaster. That’s the “nuclear option” for Iran. It is reportedly part of a military p...

by N S Rajaram on 04 May 2019 16 Comments

In the famous detective story, Silver Blaze, the following conversation takes place between the legendary detective Holmes and Scotland Yard detective Inspector Tobias Gregson: Inspector Gregson (Scotland Yard detective): “Is there any other point to which you would wish to draw my attention?” Sherlock Holmes: “To the curious incident of the dog in the nig...

by The Saker on 03 May 2019 1 Comment

As everybody predicted, Poroshenko completely lost the election. As I wrote in my previous column, this is both amazing (considering Poro’s immense and extensive resources and the fact that his opponent was, literally, a clown (ok, a comic if you prefer). His defeat was also so predictable as to be almost inevitable: not only is the man genuinely hated all o...

by Thierry Meyssan on 02 May 2019 0 Comment

The Élysée used the fire of Notre-Dame de Paris to carry out a project that was sleeping in the boxes. It has set new rules, outside tender procedures and respect for heritage not to restore the cathedral, but to transform the Île de la Cité into Europe’s leading tourist destination on the eve of the Olympic Games of 2024. To avoid judicial constraints, he a...

by R Hariharan on 01 May 2019 2 Comments

The International Criminal Court’s recent rejection of its chief prosecutor’s request to investigate alleged war crimes and crimes against humanity in Afghanistan has laid bare the limitations of its working. The statement of the Court that the current situation in Afghanistan “made the prospects for a successful investigation and prosecution extremely limit...

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