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Strategies & Market Trends : 2026 TeoTwawKi ... 2032 Darkest Interregnum -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: marcher who wrote (176530)8/17/2021 12:05:06 AM
From: TobagoJack1 Recommendation

Recommended By
marcher

  Respond to of 217791
 
btw, this hit the press on my end, that it seems Team Biden might want help from Teams Putin and Xi, or Team Putin & Xi, setting aside the bad feelings at the recent Alaska meeting when Team China noted America is not dealing w/ China from a position of strength.

I remain agnostic because one must beware of DNC / GOP trying to negotiate anything. China and Russia tend to keep their words (never mind the dire situation that UK gamed making Stalin smiling with Hitler temporarily necessary).

It would have best had Team USA joined the recent exercises to share fresh experience and prepare the peace-keepers better for whatever might happen next.





scmp.com

China ‘willing’ to work with US on Afghanistan, but calls for easing of other pressures

- In a flurry of diplomatic calls, Washington’s Secretary of State Antony Blinken secured Beijing’s support for cooperation, but not at any price
- Blinken has also spoken to Russia’s foreign minister and discussions have also been held between Moscow and Beijing



Wendy Wu in Beijing

Published: 10:34am, 17 Aug, 2021



The fall of Kabul on Monday prompted a flurry of diplomatic phone calls between the US, China and Russia about what follows the Taliban’s success in Afghanistan. Photo: AFP

US Secretary of State Antony Blinken picked up the phone on Monday to Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi for a discussion on how the two countries could work together to achieve a “soft landing” for Afghanistan . He was told Beijing was willing, but Washington would need to step back the pressure on its greatest rival, according to China’s state media.

Wang earlier had spoken to his Russian counterpart Sergey Lavrov , with both sides agreeing that Beijing and Moscow should step up their communication and coordination over the Afghanistan situation.

In a flurry of diplomatic phone calls, Blinken also spoke to Lavrov in the aftermath of the chaotic fall of the Afghan government as the Taliban took over Kabul and the presidential palace on Monday.

Afghan chaos left by US a ‘lesson’ for Taiwan, Chinese media warns
17 Aug 2021



While the US State Department provided few details of the Wang-Blinken discussion, Chinese state news agency Xinhua said Beijing had called for Washington to “play a constructive role” and take part in the peaceful reconstruction of the war-torn country.

“China is willing to communicate and dialogue with the US to push for a soft landing of the Afghanistan problem, preventing new civil war or humanitarian disaster in the country, to avoid it from [becoming] a breeding ground and shelter for terrorism, and encouraging Afghanistan to set up an inclusive political framework in line with the Afghanistan situation,” Wang said.

At least 7 people killed at Kabul airport as thousands of Afghans try to flee Taliban: US officials

The Taliban took control of Afghanistan on Monday, putting an end to two decades of US support for the Afghan government. President Joe Biden gave a speech defending the US military withdrawal after a chaotic evacuation of its diplomats which drew comparisons to the defeated retreat from Saigon at the end of the Vietnam war in 1975.

Wang said what happened in Afghanistan “once again proved that it would only lead to failure to apply a foreign model mechanically to a country with a different history, culture and situation”.

“A regime cannot hold on without the support of the people. Strong power and military methods will only lead to more questions,” he said.

‘I do not regret my decision’: Biden defends US exit from Afghanistan
17 Aug 2021



For Beijing, the Taliban’s rapid takeover of the capital Kabul and presidential palace raises concerns that turmoil and instability could spill over into its highly sensitive, western Xinjiang region.

Wang also said it was “dangerous and mistaken” of the previous US administration to remove the Eastern Turkestan Islamic Movement (ETIM) from its terror list, describing it as a “double standard” in Washington’s war on terrorism. He called for a US policy shift to “clear the barriers” to China-US cooperation on Afghanistan issues and global terrorism.

He reiterated Beijing’s stance on bilateral relations, saying China and the US should coordinate and cooperate in global challenges and regional hot issues, but warned that Washington should not count on China’s cooperation while it was deliberately working to contain China and hurts its interests.

The US state department’s brief statement on the call said the two discussed developments in Afghanistan “including the security situation and our respective efforts to bring US and PRC citizens to safety”.

China warns UN about a possible resurgence of terrorism in Afghanistan after Taliban victory

Xinhua provided more detail, reporting that Blinken had said the Taliban should announce a clean break with extremism, opt for an orderly transfer of power and establish an inclusive government. He also expressed the hope that China would play an important role to this end.

According to Xinhua, Blinken also said the US recognised that the future of Afghanistan should be decided by the Afghan people, and called on the Taliban to ensure the safety of all those who wished to leave the country.

“The US reiterated its opposition to all kinds of terrorism and does not seek turbulence at the border region in China’s west region,” Xinhua said, adding that Blinken had said both countries could seek constructive ways to address bilateral conflicts.

In his discussions with Lavrov, Wang said China and Russia should step up their communications over Afghanistan to push the Taliban to ensure the safety of their citizens and organizations, and encourage the Taliban to adopt a mild religious policy and crackdown on terrorism, according to a readout from the Chinese foreign ministry.

The readout quoted Lavrov as saying Russia was willing to jointly monitor and address with China the developments in Afghanistan.



To: marcher who wrote (176530)8/17/2021 4:13:30 PM
From: TobagoJack  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 217791
 
Kyle is unhappy that peace won per initiative by Trump and closure by Biden. Go figure.

zerohedge.com

Kyle Bass: China To 'Move In Under Security And Diplomatic Guise' To Pilfer Afghanistan's Trillions In MineralsKyle Bass is warning that China - which announced it was ready to deepen " friendly and cooperative" relations with the Taliban mere hours after they toppled the Afghan government - is going to "move in under security and diplomatic guise" to pilfer Afghanistan's trillions in mineral deposits.



"On the basis of fully respecting the sovereignty of Afghanistan and the will of all factions in the country, China has maintained contact and communication with the Afghan Taliban and played a constructive role in promoting the political settlement of the Afghan issue," said spokeswoman Hua Chunying at a press conference on Monday.

And recall that Beijing officials hosted Taliban leaders three weeks ago, as the Biden administration embarked on its "hasty withdrawal" from Afghanistan that led to its 'hasty' collapse.

#Taliban leader visit in #China
More to come… pic.twitter.com/HJPx1XTDZR

— Serena Dong (@theserenadong) July 28, 2021
Appearing on CNBC's Squawk Box, the legendary investor and founder of Hayman Capital said "Afghanistan is plagued with the curse of plenty.They have, we think, upwards of $3T worth of minerals. The US Pentagon believes one province ... has the largest lithium deposit in the world," adding "China will move in under security and diplomatic guise."

"Afghanistan is plagued with the curse of plenty. They have, we think, upwards of $3T worth of minerals. The US Pentagon believes one province ... has the largest lithium deposit in the world," says @Jkylebass. "China will move in under security and diplomatic guise." pic.twitter.com/RuOoUufSHR

— Squawk Box (@SquawkCNBC) August 17, 2021
Bass, a history buff, expanded in a brief Twitter thread - noting the story of one of the "biggest US Special Forces firefights of all-time" which occurred in the Shok valley - all to remove a terrorist warlord who was building his empire through the operation of illegal rare-earth mines.

"Be sure to look up this vicious battle as 15 Green Berets and 65 Afghan commandos fought an ambush of over 250 terrorists and not one single American Flag of United States died that day in a 6-hour firefight that endured 70 danger-close bombings of 1000lb JDAMS. While some of our bravest won’t [h]ave their arms or legs grown back, they fought for peace, stability, and the long-term economic prosperity of Afghanistan. With China moving in to rape the countryside and the people of Afghanistan, that dream will never be realized."

Be sure to look up this vicious battle as 15 Green Berets and 65 Afghan commandos fought an ambush of over 250 terrorists and not one single American ???? died that day in a 6-hour firefight that endured 70 danger-close bombings of 1000lb JDAMS. While some of our bravest won’t

— ????Kyle Bass???? (@Jkylebass) August 17, 2021
Very few know that the battle of Shok Valley was about long-term economic architecture of Afghanistan and rare earth metals and the #USA #China #GreenBerets #Afghanistan

— ????Kyle Bass???? (@Jkylebass) August 17, 2021
According to Hua, the Taliban has "on multiple occasions" said that it "looks forward to China’s participation in Afghanistan’s reconstruction and development."

"We are ready to continue to develop good-neighborliness and friendly cooperation with Afghanistan and play a constructive role in Afghanistan’s peace and reconstruction," Hua added.

Such nice partners...

Biometric data apparently has been seized by Taliban of the Afghans that helped US last 20 years allowing for execution lists and a swift round up.

Isn’t technology wonderful! t.co

— Ed ?? The Obsolete Man...a Free Thinker (@DowdEdward) August 17, 2021
Bass wasn't the only one to point out China's windfall.

"...there should be pressure on China if they are going to do alliances with the Taliban in order to generate economic aid for them — that they do it on international terms," said Shamaila Khan, director of emerging market debt at AllianceBernstein, during a Tuesday appearance on CNBC, adding that Taliban insurgents will now control resources that are a "very dangerous proposition for the world."

"It should be an international initiative to make sure that if any country is agreeing to exploit its minerals on behalf of the Taliban, to only do it under strict humanitarian conditions where human rights, and rights for women are preserved in the situation," she added.

As we noted in 2010, nearly $1 trillion in untapped mineral depositswere identified in Afghanistan, far more than any previously known reserves - and a figure which has risen in recent years to more than $3 trillion.

Rare earth metals in Afghanistan were estimated to be worth between $1 trillion and $3 trillion in 2020, according to a report in news magazine The Diplomat, citing Ahmad Shah Katawazai, a former diplomat at the Afghan Embassy in Washington D.C. A report by American news organization The Hill earlier this year put the value at about $3 trillion.

...

Afghanistan has rare earth elements such as lanthanum, cerium, neodymium, and veins of aluminium, gold, silver, zinc, mercury, and lithium, according to Katawazai. Rare earths are used in everything from electronics to electric vehicles, and satellites and aircraft.

In 2017, just-fled Afghan President Ashraf Ghani was in talks with Germany about lithium deposits in Helmand province, which could be mined by European countries to make batteries for smart phones, electric vehicles and other technology.

Meanwhile, in January of this year the Afghan government terminated oil and gas contracts with China, and sought to renegotiate terms of a massive $100 million mining concession because Beijing established a spy ring within the country, according to Foreign Policy.

Afghan government officials said that the country has terminated oil and gas contracts with China and is seeking to renegotiate the terms of a massive mining concession that has been nearly dormant since it was inked by China more than a decade ago.

The Afghan officials said they busted an alleged Chinese espionage ring operating in Kabul to hunt down Uighur Muslims with the help of the Haqqani network, a terrorist outfit linked to the Taliban. A senior security official said the ring had been operating for six or seven years. Afghan authorities have cooperated with China in the past on the detention and deportation of Uighurs suspected of terrorist activity, but officials said they were shocked at China’s duplicity.

...

The arrest has prompted Kabul, which is seeking to put its economy in order as it faces an uncertain future with the unfolding peace process, to use the incident as “leverage” against Beijing, one official said, especially in terms of renegotiating multimillion-dollar mining concessions. -FP

So, it should come as no surprise that China - which dominates the rare earths markets globally (producing 120,000 metric tons or 70% of total rare earths in 2018 per CNBC) is more than a little excited to 'have their way' with Afghanistan's profitable deposits.

U.S. reserves also pale in comparison to China. The U.S. has a total of 1.4 million metric tons of reserves, versus 44 million metric tons of reserves in China.

China used rare earths as a threat during its trade war with the U.S. in 2019, when Beijing threatened to cut off supplies to the U.S. Rare earth minerals are commonly used in high-tech devices, automobiles, clean energy and defense.

The U.S. was heavily dependent on China for rare earths in 2019, when the Asian country was exporting 80% of U.S. needs, according to the U.S. Geological Survey. - CNBC

And let's not forget Afghanistan's lucrative CIA-enabled poppy trade. As MintPressNews noted in June, "Last year saw Afghan opium poppy cultivation grow by over a third while counter-narcotics operations dropped off a cliff. The country is said to be the source of over 90% of all the world’s illicit opium, from which heroin and other opioids are made. More land is under cultivation for opium in Afghanistan than is used for coca production across all of Latin America, with the creation of the drug said to directly employ around half a million people."

As Pepe Escobar wrote in The Asia Times last month, "Taliban spokesperson Suhail Shaheen has been very consistent: the Taliban regard China as a “friend” to Afghanistan and are eager to have Beijing investing in reconstruction work “as soon as possible."

Looks like that's going to happen sooner than anyone thought.

Sent from my iPad



To: marcher who wrote (176530)8/19/2021 4:47:30 AM
From: TobagoJack1 Recommendation

Recommended By
marcher

  Respond to of 217791
 
Kissinger, quoted long ago, might turn out to be too spot-on, for the betrayal is total and absolute

wsj.com
Henry Kissinger once quipped that "it may be dangerous to be America's enemy, but to be America's friend is fatal."

scmp.com

Afghanistan: Taliban seized US military biometric devices, report says

Afghans scramble to delete digital history, evade biometricsConcerns that digital IDs and databases can be used to target people

Agencies

Published: 2:36pm, 19 Aug, 2021



A US soldier scans the eyes of an Afghan man with an Automated Biometric Identification System in 2011. File photo: AFP

Taliban forces have reportedly seized US military biometric devices that can scan irises, fingers, and faces, which could help them identify Afghans who assisted coalition forces.

The devices, known as HIIDE, or Handheld Interagency Identity Detection Equipment, were seized during the Taliban’s offensive, according to The Intercept.

The Intercept spoke to current and former US military officials, “all of whom worried that sensitive data they contain could be used by the Taliban”.

The devices are mean to connect with Biometrics Automated Toolset (BAT), identification-processing software used by US soldiers to scan for threats.

HIIDE can create tracking reports of biometric encounters and warns users if a person being checked is on a watch list, Signal Magazine reported.

If the Taliban have not already accessed the data, a US Army Special Operations veteran said that the Inter-Services Intelligence (ISS), Pakistan's spy agency that has a history of working closely with the Taliban, may provide them with the tools to do so, The Intercept reported.

Many Afghans who were not evacuated were racing to erase their past online activity.



Boys and men were “frantically going through phones to delete messages they have sent, music they’ve listened to & pictures they’ve taken,” BBC reporter Sana Safi wrote on Twitter on Sunday.

UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres has warned of “chilling” curbs on human rights and violations against women and girls, and Amnesty International on Monday said thousands of Afghans – including academics, journalists and activists – were “at serious risk of Taliban reprisals”.

Although one anonymous woman who worked for the Afghan government burned every document tying her to her former employment, she still worries that biometric data she gave when she was hired will be used by the Taliban to track her down, The Wall Street Journal reported.

“We understand that the Taliban is now likely to have access to various biometric databases and equipment in Afghanistan,” the Human Rights First group wrote on Twitter on Monday.

“This technology is likely to include access to a database with fingerprints and iris scans, and include facial recognition technology,” the group added.

The US-based advocacy group quickly published a Farsi-language version of its guide on how to delete digital history – that it had produced last year for activists in Hong Kong – and also put together a manual on how to evade biometrics.

Tips to bypass facial recognition include looking down, wearing things to obscure facial features, or applying many layers of make-up, the guide said, although fingerprint and iris scans were difficult to bypass.

“With the data, it is much more difficult to hide, obfuscate your and your family’s identities, and the data can also be used to flesh out your contacts and network,” said Welton Chang, chief technology officer at Human Rights First.

US troops unable to help people get to Kabul airport, says Pentagon chief
19 Aug 2021



Even five years ago, the Taliban was using government biometric systems to target members of the security forces, checking their fingerprints against a database, according to local media reports.

On Monday, just hours after the militants rolled into the capital Kabul, there were fears that this was already happening.

“Taliban started door-to-door search” for government officials, former security forces members and those who worked for foreign non-profits, a Twitter user called Mustafa said, adding that journalists’ homes were also searched.

A Kabul resident said in a private message that she had heard of house-to-house inspections, and that the Islamist militants were using a “biometrics machine”.

The Taliban, in a statement, said it “assures all its citizens that it will, as always, protect their life, property and honour and create a peaceful and secure environment for its beloved nation”.

Thomson Reuters Foundation and Business Insider