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


To: THE ANT who wrote (197043)3/8/2023 1:34:40 PM
From: Pogeu Mahone  Respond to of 217588
 
It will be interesting to watch the U.S. have a coup against the Mexican cartels.

The cartels should win hands down, as they pay off all of our gov't officials from janitors to U.S. senators

and perhaps Hunter with 10% for the Big Guy.



To: THE ANT who wrote (197043)3/11/2023 3:39:39 AM
From: TobagoJack  Respond to of 217588
 
Re <<The US just did>> ... possibly too many things, concentrating on one, Ukraines, and might be a bad idea.

Winning in Ukraine might help the situation in which MENA (Middle East / North Africa) is lost, arguably, anf=d MENA is in process of being lost; but it would be unforgivable if both MENA and Ukraine are lost at the same time in related moves, and the odds are not zero.

I am watching, agnostically, what Team Israel might do, from one extreme, of launching regime changes in either Saudi Arabia and / or Iran, to another extreme, make nice with neighbours. Both are not-impossible.

So, as to denying China Latin America, am not convinced such can be done, because China does not want Latin America, but merely wants to trade w/ Latin America, a much more modest goal.

But, yes, I know what you meant and appreciate the possibility. However, am doubtful that Team Blinken can do much right, anywhere at any time.

I watch Israel, watching the Chinese solving a puzzle that eluded the Americans, mathematically, with precision, potentially enabling peace in the entire region

haaretz.com

Saudi-Iran Rapprochement: In China's Middle East, Israel Has Little Influence - Middle East News - Haaretz.com

Zvi Bar'el
Mar 10, 2023 9:58 pm IST

Israel's dream of forming an Arab alliance against Iran was shattered on Friday with the news that Iran and Saudi Arabia have agreed to restore diplomatic ties within two months. The dramatic announcement is likely to redraw the regional map of friends and foes, and will have global reverberations. The agreement provides Iran with much-needed legitimacy in the Arab world, and could lead to further deals with Arab states like Egypt, pave the way to end the war in Yemen, offer a workable solution to the crisis in Lebanon, and even lead to a resumption of negotiations to save the nuclear deal.

The Saudi-Iranian rapprochement will force the United States to reevaluate its standing in the region. After all, it was China – not Washington or Moscow – that was able to reassemble a complex political constellation traditionally under American purview.



The renewal of diplomatic ties between Saudi Arabia and Iran has been on a slow burn for the past two years. Five rounds of talk were held with Iraqi mediation in Baghdad or under guidance of Oman, who had mediated between Iran and the U.S. in the lead up to the nuclear deal in 2015.

Saudi Arabia and Iran broke-off ties in 2016 after the Saudis executed the prominent firebrand Shiite cleric Nimr al-Nimr, triggering reprisal attacks on the Saudi Embassy in Tehran. A year earlier, Saudi Arabia launch an all-out, brutal assault on the Iranian-backed Houthi movement in Yemen, opening the door through which Iran could intervene in another regional conflict, alongside its operations in Iraq and Lebanon.

The disastrous war in Yemen, with over 150,000 deaths, has become a central point of contention between Washington and its European allies on one side and Riyadh. The brutal execution of journalist Jamal Khashoggi added fuel to the fire, turning Saudi leader Mohammed Bin Salman into persona non grata in Washington. U.S. President Joe Biden was only stating the obvious when he announced he wants to "recalibrate the relationship with Saudi Arabia."

At the same time, Iran had begun implementing its part of the nuclear deal, international firms were knocking at its doors, massive investment deals were finalized, and it seemed that Iran, who had judiciously followed the terms of the deal, was on its way to replace Saudi Arabia as a major American and Western ally. The Saudis' predicament didn't last long. Following Israeli pressure, President Trump withdrew from the nuclear deal, and advanced the 'deal of the century' along with the Abraham Accords and pushed for a regional anti-Iranian alliance.

In 2021, the alliance proved to be a chimera. The UAE withdrew its troops from Yemen, leaving the Saudis to fight it alone. A year later, in August 2022, Abu Dhabi and Kuwait restored diplomatic ties with Iran, only a month after President Biden's controversial visit to Jeddah, and his flaccid handshake with MBS.

No real romance blossomed between the two leaders, and in October, Biden received a serious wake-up call when Saudi Arabia announced it would not raise oil production quotas, after Biden requested they do so to ease oil price hikes sparked by the war in Ukraine.

This wasn't the only blow laid by the Saudis. In December, four Saudi fighter jets escorted Chinese President Xi Jinping's plane as he landed on an official, or shall we say royal, visit to the kingdom. This wasn't his first visit, but this time he came to sign a strategic alliance agreement which included trade and investment deals worth tens of billions of dollars, and more importantly, developing nuclear power reactors designated for domestic energy production.

Saudi Arabia has been asking the United States to help it build nuclear reactors for many years. But American demands, including an insistence that the Saudis comply with International Atomic Energy Agency regulations, derailed any cooperation on the issue. In 2020 The Wall Street Journal reported the disconcerting news that China and Saudi Arabia were cooperating to exploit the kingdom's vast uranium deposits, and shortly after that, U.S. intelligence agencies announced they are verifying reports that Saudi Arabia was looking to build a nuclear reactor with Chinese assistance.

This week, The Wall Street Journal reported that Saudi Arabia has asked for U.S. security guarantees and assistance with building up its civilian nuclear program as a condition for normalizing ties between the Arabian kingdom and Israel. But the U.S. Congress has been blocking such assistance.

It seems then that Saudi Arabia has found a solution in China, with whom it signed a nuclear reactor construction memorandum in 2017. In any case, the Saudis have presented the U.S. with a serious dilemma: help Saudi Arabia with its civilian nuclear program and potentially gain its support for a deal with Israel, or to let China reap the economic and political rewards.

China has become a major a strategic ally of both Saudi Arabia and Iran, with whom it signed a 400 million dollar economic cooperation agreement over 25 years. But both China and Iran know that fulfilling the potential of their alliance depends on signing a new nuclear deal. China has entered the fray as a mediator between Iran and Saudi Arabia in order to construct an alliance that serves the interests of all three without needing the services or assurances of the United States. More importantly, China is taking the United States' place as an economic and strategic power in the region. A power that Israel has little influence over.



To: THE ANT who wrote (197043)3/11/2023 3:48:13 AM
From: TobagoJack  Respond to of 217588
 
Continuing to watching Israel, from another angle and through different lens, as agnostic as ever for am unfamiliar with Israeli media slant / stance

timesofisrael.com

Iran and Saudi Arabia restore ties after years of tensions

Agreement reached in China will see Tehran and Riyadh reopen embassies; relations were severed in 2016 amid furor over Saudi execution of prominent Shiite cleric

By Jon Gambrell
10 March 2023, 2:52 pm

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates (AP) — Iran and Saudi Arabia on Friday agreed to reestablish diplomatic relations and reopen embassies after years of tensions between the two countries, including a devastating attack on the heart of the kingdom’s oil production attributed to Tehran.

The deal, struck in Beijing this week amid its ceremonial National People’s Congress, represents a major diplomatic victory for the Chinese as Gulf states perceive the United States slowly withdrawing from the wider Middle East. It also comes as diplomats have been trying to end a yearslong war in Yemen, a conflict in which both Iran and Saudi Arabia are deeply entrenched.

The two countries released a joint communique with China on the deal, which apparently brokered the agreement. Chinese state media did not immediately report on the deal.Israel’s Judiciary: Reform or Ruin?00:00/03:22

Iranian state media posted images and video it described as being taken in China with the meeting. It showed Ali Shamkhani, the secretary of Iran’s Supreme National Security Council, with a Saudi official and a Chinese official that state TV named as Wang Yi.

“After implementing of the decision, the foreign ministers of the both nations will meet to prepare for exchange of ambassadors,” Iranian state television said. It added that the talks had been held over four days.

Saudi Arabian officials did not immediately respond to a request for comment from The Associated Press. Shortly after the Iranian announcement, Saudi state media began publishing the same statement.

Tensions have been high between Iran and Saudi Arabia. The kingdom broke off ties with Iran in 2016 after protesters invaded Saudi diplomatic posts there. Saudi Arabia days earlier had executed a prominent Shiite cleric, triggering the demonstrations.

In the years since, tensions have risen dramatically across the Middle East since the US unilaterally withdrew from Iran’s nuclear deal with world powers in 2018. Iran has been blamed for a series of attacks in the time since, including one that targeted the heart of Saudi Arabia’s oil industry in 2019, temporarily halving the kingdom’s crude production.

Though Yemen’s Iranian-backed Houthi rebels initially claimed the attack, Western nations and experts have blamed the attack on Tehran. Iran long has denied launching the attack. It has also denied carrying out other assaults later attributed to the Islamic Republic.

The Houthis seized Yemen’s capital, Sanaa, in September 2014 and forced the internationally recognized government into exile in Saudi Arabia. A Saudi-led coalition armed with US weaponry and intelligence entered the war on the side of Yemen’s exiled government in March 2015. Years of inconclusive fighting has created a humanitarian disaster and pushed the Arab world’s poorest nation to the brink of famine.

A six-month cease-fire in Yemen’s war, the longest of the conflict, expired in October despite diplomatic efforts to renew it. That led to fears the war could again escalate. More than 150,000 people have been killed in Yemen during the fighting, including over 14,500 civilians.

In recent months, negotiations have been ongoing, including in Oman, a longtime interlocutor between Iran and the US. Some have hoped for an agreement ahead of the holy Muslim fasting month of Ramadan, which will begin later in March.

The US Navy and its allies have seized a number of weapons shipments recently they describe as coming from Iran heading to Yemen. Iran denies arming the Houthis, despite weapons seized mirroring others seen on the battlefield in the rebels’ hands. A United Nations arms embargo bars nations from sending weapons to the Houthis.



To: THE ANT who wrote (197043)3/11/2023 4:00:05 AM
From: TobagoJack1 Recommendation

Recommended By
marcher

  Respond to of 217588
 
Some folks unhappy in Israel that peace is breaking out, or am misreading the news flow

al-monitor.com

Israeli leaders trade accusations over Saudi-Iran rapprochement via China

Coalition and opposition leaders are trading accusations over which government is to blame over the relations-renewal deal between Tehran and Riyadh.



Opposition leader Yair Lapid (L) of the Yesh Atid party gestures while speaking at the Knesset in Jerusalem on Feb. 22, 2023. - OREN BEN HAKOON/AFP via Getty Images
March 10, 2023

An unnamed senior Israeli political official blamed former Prime Ministers Yair Lapid and Naftali Bennett Friday for the China-brokered deal between Saudi Arabia and Iran renewing diplomatic relations, following criticism from the opposition to the Benjamin Netanyahu government at missing opportunity to improve relations with Arab states.

The official told Israeli paper Ynet that it's perception of weakness by Saudi of the Lapid-Bennett governments, and of US that drew Saudi closer to Iran via China. "The contacts between the countries started a year ago, during the term of the previous government, because there was a feeling of Israeli and American weakness. Weakness brings rapprochement with Iran, while strength pushes rapprochement away."

"It is important to form a strong position against Iran, both in the United States and in Europe. The Israeli policy of preventing Iran from arming itself does not depend on the support of any country," he added, attempting to defend the Netanyahu who has prioritized his own rapprochement with Saudi.

Join the Middle East's top business and policy professionals to access exclusive PRO insights today.

According to the official, efforts will continue for an Israeli rapprochement with Riyadh. "The contacts are frequent and the basic picture did not change. The stronger the Western position against Iran is, the less significant their relations with Saudi Arabia will be."

Lapid's office rejected the accusation. It responded, "These are delusional statements. During the period of our government, an aviation agreement was signed with Saudi Arabia and the tripartite security agreement with Saudi Arabia and Egypt."

He went on to fault Netanyahu for undermining relations with Washington. "All of this came to a halt when the most extreme government in Israel’s history was established here, and it became clear to the Saudis that [Prime Minister Benjamin] Netanyahu was weak and the Americans stopped listening to him. Apparently, the Italian wine blurred Mr. Netanyahu's memory."

Earlier on Friday, Lapid warned, "The [Saudi-Iran] agreement is a complete and dangerous failure of the Israeli government's foreign policy." Attacking the coalition on its judicial overhaul plan, Lapid said, "This is what happens when you deal all day long with legal madness instead of doing what’s needs to be done vis-à-vis Iran and instead of strengthening relations with the United States."

Former Prime Minister Naftali Bennett echoed Lapid’s statement, saying, "The renewal of relations between Saudi Arabia and Iran is a serious and dangerous development for Israel, a political victory for Iran and a fatal blow to the effort to build a regional coalition against Iran. It is a resounding failure of the Netanyahu government, stemming from a combination of diplomatic neglect with general weakness and internal conflict in the country. "

Bennett added, "The countries of the world and the region watch Israel and see a country in conflict, with a dysfunctional government. And so these countries choose a side. The Netanyahu government is a resounding economic, political and security failure. Every day, its actions endanger the State of Israel."

Senior opposition member Gideon Saar, who is also member of the Knesset’s foreign affairs and security committee, tweeted, "Netanyahu promised peace with the Saudis. But eventually [the Saudis] made peace with Iran."

Chair of the Knesset's foreign affairs and security committee Yuli Edelstein said that the agreement "is very bad for Israel and for the entire free world," adding, "The world does not stop while we are busy here with power struggles and clashes — certainly not our worst enemy."

The news of the agreement came as Netanyahu was in Rome for his meeting with Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni. Speaking with Italian businesspeople before the publication of the agreement, Netanyahu said, "I think the possibilities will grow beyond imagination if we are successful with another goal that I have, and that is to achieve normalization and peace with Saudi Arabia. One of my central goals is to achieve normalization with Saudi Arabia."

Netanyahu noted that the economic possibilities are obvious, such as a pipeline connecting Saudi Arabia and the Haifa port, and into Europe.

The Israeli press noted that Netanyahu’s optimistic words before the publication of the agreement clearly showed he was out of the loop and that the Saudi decision shows that Riyadh does not believe Israel has a viable possibility of striking the Iranian nuclear plans and destroying the Iranian nuclear program.